Anthocyanins and Type 2 Diabetes: An Update of Human Study and Clinical Trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the therapeutic effects of dietary anthocyanins from fruits and vegetables on diabetes-related outcomes, including glucose regulation and inflammation reduction.
Results Summary
The study found that anthocyanin supplementation improved fasting blood glucose levels, glycated hemoglobin, and other diabetes-related indicators, with higher dosages showing more favorable effects. An anthocyanin-rich diet was associated with better diabetes outcomes, particularly in at-risk groups.
Population
Individuals with or at risk of type 2 diabetes.
Effective Dosage
Increased dosages were noted as more effective, but specific amounts and frequencies were not provided.
Duration
Not specified.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anthocyanins | decrease | glucose level | pre-clinical studies under diabetic conditions | - | role in glucose level regulation | #1 |
Anthocyanins | increase | gut microbiota | pre-clinical studies under diabetic conditions | - | gut microbiota improvement | #2 |
Anthocyanins | decrease | inflammation | pre-clinical studies under diabetic conditions | - | inflammation reduction | #3 |
incorporating these research advancements into clinical practice | increase | prevention and management of type 2 diabetes | - | - | significantly improve the prevention and management | #4 |
dietary anthocyanins | increase | diabetes | - | - | therapeutic effects | #5 |
Anthocyanin supplementation | decrease | fasting blood glucose levels | - | - | regulatory effect | #6 |
Anthocyanin supplementation | decrease | glycated hemoglobin | - | - | regulatory effect | #7 |
Anthocyanin supplementation | decrease | other diabetes-related indicators | - | - | regulatory effect | #8 |
increased anthocyanin dosages | increase | diabetes treatment | - | - | more favorable implications | #9 |
anthocyanin-rich diet | increase | diabetes outcomes | at-risk groups | - | improve | #10 |
Anthocyanins are phenolic compounds occurring in fruits and vegetables. Evidence from pre-clinical studies indicates their role in glucose level regulation, gut microbiota improvement, and inflammation reduction under diabetic conditions. Therefore, incorporating these research advancements into clinical practice would significantly improve the prevention and management of type 2 diabetes. This narrative review provides a concise overview of 18 findings from recent clinical research published over the last 5 years that investigate the therapeutic effects of dietary anthocyanins on diabetes. Anthocyanin supplementation has been shown to have a regulatory effect on fasting blood glucose levels, glycated hemoglobin, and other diabetes-related indicators. Furthermore, increased anthocyanin dosages had more favorable implications for diabetes treatment. This review provides evidence that an anthocyanin-rich diet can improve diabetes outcomes, especially in at-risk groups. Future research should focus on optimal intervention duration, consider multiple clinical biomarkers, and analyze anthocyanin effects among well-controlled versus poorly controlled groups of patients with diabetes.