Oxidised LDL levels decreases after the consumption of ready-to-eat meals supplemented with cocoa extract within a hypocaloric diet.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine the health effects of daily cocoa extract consumption within a hypocaloric diet on oxidative status and vascular markers in middle-aged overweight/obese subjects.
Results Summary
Cocoa extract supplementation improved oxidative status (reduced oxLDL and MPO levels) and some vascular markers, with more pronounced benefits in men. Both groups showed improvements in anthropometric and biochemical measurements, but the cocoa group had additional oxidative benefits.
Population
Middle-aged (57.26 ± 5.24 years) overweight/obese (BMI 30.59 ± 2.33 kg/m²) male and female volunteers.
Effective Dosage
1.4 g cocoa extract (645.3 mg polyphenols) daily, incorporated into meals.
Duration
4 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | anthropometric measurements | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | improved | #1 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | body composition measurements | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | improved | #2 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | blood pressure measurements | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | improved | #3 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | blood biochemical measurements | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | improved | #4 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | oxidised LDL cholesterol (oxLDL) | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | showed a higher reduction | #5 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | decreased | #6 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (sICAM-1) | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | decreased significantly | #7 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | no change | Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 (sVCAM-1) | middle-aged overweight/obese subjects | - | did not present differences | #8 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | increase | overall health parameters | men | - | showed a different effect by gender, presenting more beneficial effects | #9 |
cocoa extract supplemented meals within a hypocaloric diet | decrease | oxidative status (oxLDL) | middle-aged subjects | - | improved | #10 |
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Cocoa flavanols are recognised by their favourable antioxidant and vascular effects. This study investigates the influence on health of the daily consumption of ready-to-eat meals supplemented with cocoa extract within a hypocaloric diet, on middle-aged overweight/obese subjects. METHODS AND RESULTS: Fifty healthy male and female middle-aged volunteers [57.26 ± 5.24 years and body mass index (BMI) 30.59 ± 2.33 kg/m(2)] were recruited to participate in a 4 week randomised, parallel and double-blind study. After following 3 days on a low-polyphenol diet, 25 volunteers received meals supplemented with 1.4 g of cocoa extract (645.3 mg of polyphenols) and the other 25 participants received control meals, within a 15% energy restriction diet. On the 4th week of intervention individuals in both dietary groups improved (p < 0.05) anthropometric, body composition, blood pressure and blood biochemical measurements. Oxidised LDL cholesterol (oxLDL), showed a higher reduction (p = 0.030) in the cocoa group. Moreover, myeloperoxidase (MPO) levels decreased only in the cocoa supplemented group (p = 0.007). Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 (sICAM-1) decreased significantly in both groups, while Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 (sVCAM-1) did not present differences after the 4 weeks of intervention. Interestingly, cocoa intake showed a different effect by gender, presenting more beneficial effects in men. CONCLUSIONS: The consumption of cocoa extract as part of ready-to-eat meals and within a hypocaloric diet improved oxidative status (oxLDL) in middle-aged subjects, being most remarkable in males. REGISTRATION NUMBER: Registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01596309).