Bioaccessibility and Bioavailability of Diet Polyphenols and Their Modulation of Gut Microbiota.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore the potential health benefits of polyphenols, particularly flavonoids, focusing on their bioavailability, bioaccessibility, and effects on gut microbiota and gastrointestinal health.
Results Summary
The study found that polyphenols, including flavonoids, may promote gut microbiota eubiosis and offer protective effects against gastric and colon cancers, with benefits likely mediated by microbial modulation.
Population
Not specified (general human health context).
Effective Dosage
Not specified.
Duration
Not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
diet-derived polyphenols | neutral | human health | - | - | bioactive compounds with several potentially beneficial effects | #1 |
polyphenols | neutral | gastrointestinal tract | - | - | protective effect | #2 |
polyphenols | neutral | intestinal microbiota | - | - | promote the maintenance of the eubiosis | #3 |
polyphenols | neutral | gastric and colon cancers | - | - | protective effects | #4 |
dietary supplementation of polyphenols | neutral | - | - | - | benefits obtained | #5 |
polyphenols | increase | bacterial component | - | - | positively modulate | #6 |
It is generally accepted that diet-derived polyphenols are bioactive compounds with several potentially beneficial effects on human health. In general, polyphenols have several chemical structures, and the most representative are flavonoids, phenolic acids, and stilbenes. It should be noted that the beneficial effects of polyphenols are closely related to their bioavailability and bioaccessibility, as many of them are rapidly metabolized after administration. Polyphenols-with a protective effect on the gastrointestinal tract-promote the maintenance of the eubiosis of the intestinal microbiota with protective effects against gastric and colon cancers. Thus, the benefits obtained from dietary supplementation of polyphenols would seem to be mediated by the gut microbiota. Taken at certain concentrations, polyphenols have been shown to positively modulate the bacterial component, increasing