Abstract

BackgroundClitoria ternatea L., a natural food-colorant containing anthocyanin, demonstrated antioxidant and antihyperglycemic activity. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of Clitoria ternatea flower extract (CTE) on postprandial plasma glycemia response and antioxidant status in healthy men.MethodsIn a randomized, crossover study, 15 healthy men (ages 22.53 ± 0.30 years; with body mass index of 21.57 ± 0.54 kg/m2) consumed five beverages: (1) 50 g sucrose in 400 mL water; (2) 1 g CTE in 400 mL of water; (3) 2 g CTE in 400 mL of water; (4) 50 g sucrose and 1 g CTE in 400 mL of water; and (5) 50 g sucrose and 2 g CTE in 400 mL of water. Incremental postprandial plasma glucose, insulin, uric acid, antioxidant capacities and lipid peroxidation were measured during 3 h of administration.ResultsAfter 30 min ingestion, the postprandial plasma glucose and insulin levels were suppressed when consuming sucrose plus 1 g and 2 g CTE. In addition, consumption of CTE alone did not alter plasma glucose and insulin concentration in the fasting state. The significant increase in plasma antioxidant capacity (ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP), oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC), trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC), and protein thiol) and the decrease in malondialdehyde (MDA) level were observed in the subjects who received 1 g and 2 g CTE. Furthermore, consumption of CTE protected sucrose-induced reduction in ORAC and TEAC and increase in plasma MDA.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that an acute ingestion of CTE increases plasma antioxidant capacity without hypoglycemia in the fasting state. It also improves postprandial glucose, insulin and antioxidant status when consumed with sucrose.Trial registrationThai Clinical Trials Registry: TCTR20170609003. Registered 09 September 2017.‘retrospectively registered’.

Highlights

  • Clitoria ternatea L., a natural food-colorant containing anthocyanin, demonstrated antioxidant and antihyperglycemic activity

  • The results showed that only consumption of 2 g Clitoria ternatea flower extract (CTE) with sucrose significantly suppressed a rise in postprandial plasma insulin at 60 min compared to sucrose (P < 0.05)

  • Our findings showed the suppression of the peak postprandial glucose and insulin concentration after consumption of CTE and sucrose

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Clitoria ternatea L., a natural food-colorant containing anthocyanin, demonstrated antioxidant and antihyperglycemic activity. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of Clitoria ternatea flower extract (CTE) on postprandial plasma glycemia response and antioxidant status in healthy men. The development of NCDs are commonly associated with modifiable behavioral risk factors; for example: unhealthy diets, physical inactivity, alcohol and tobacco use and non-modifiable risk factors such as age, gender or family history [2]. These risk factors play an important role in metabolic/physiological changes, which contribute to the development of overweight/obesity and hyperglycemia [2, 3]. ROS depletes antioxidant enzyme activities that are responsible for causing several pathologies of health implications [7]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call