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The effect of soy nut on serum total antioxidant, endothelial function and cardiovascular risk factors in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes & metabolic syndrome
January 1, 2019
Alireza Sedaghat et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the effects of soy nut on glycemic conditions, blood pressure, lipid profile, antioxidant effects, and vascular endothelial function in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Results Summary

Consuming 60 g of soy nut for 8 weeks significantly increased serum total antioxidant capacity, improved glycemic control, lipid profile, and endothelial function, but had no significant effect on blood pressure or HDL-c.

Population

70 patients with type 2 diabetes, divided into intervention (35) and control (35) groups.

Effective Dosage

60 g soy nut daily as part of daily protein intake.

Duration

8 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (9)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
decrease
fasting blood glucose
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
significantly decreased
#1
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
decrease
total serum cholesterol
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
significantly decreased
#2
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
decrease
LDL-c
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
significantly decreased
#3
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
decrease
E-Selectin
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
significantly decreased
#4
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
increase
capacity of serum total antioxidants
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
increased
#5
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
increase
brachial blood flow
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
increased
#6
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
no change
systolic/diastolic blood pressure
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
didn't have any significant effect
#7
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
no change
HDL-c
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
didn't have any significant effect
#8
60 g soy nut diet for 8 weeks
no change
TG
patients with type 2 diabetes
-
didn't have any significant effect
#9
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Type 2 diabetes has a high spread and growing process. Using appropriate food diets is among therapeutic approaches has been applied for diabetic patients. Soya utilization has shown effective results in controlling metabolic abnormalities of these patients. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of soy nut on glycemic conditions, blood pressure, lipid profile, antioxidant effects and vascular endothelial function of these patients. METHODS: 70 patients with type 2 diabetes were randomly divided into two groups of the test (35 people) and control (35 people). The patients in the intervention group were subjected to 60 g soy nut diet as a part of daily protein for 8 weeks and the control group under the usual diet of diabetes. The fasting glucose, blood pressure, lipid profile, brachial blood flow, the level of serum E-Selectin and total antioxidant capacity in control and test group were assessed before and after diet. RESULTS: Consuming 60 g soy nut for 8 weeks significantly decreased the fasting blood glucose (P = 0.03), total serum cholesterol (P < 0.01), LDL-c (P = 0.01), and E-Selectin (P < 0.01) and increased the capacity of serum total antioxidants (P < 0.01), brachial blood flow (P < 0.01) but didn't have any significant effect on systolic/diastolic blood pressure, HDL-c, and TG. CONCLUSION: Soy nut utilization in the patients with type-2 diabetes can significantly improve the glycemic condition, increase brachial blood flow, decrease E-selectin (improvement of endothelial function), increase serum total antioxidants and lipid profile but has no significant effect on blood pressure and HDL-c.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AntioxidantsBiomarkersBlood Flow VelocityBrachial ArteryCardiovascular DiseasesCase-Control StudiesDiabetes Mellitus, Type 2E-SelectinEndothelium, VascularFemaleFollow-Up StudiesGlycemic IndexHumansLipidsMaleMiddle AgedNutsPrognosisRisk FactorsGlycine max
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations16
Citations/Year2.7
Relative Citation Ratio1.28
NIH Percentile59.5%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.15
Normalized Score0.69
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