August
2007 Newsletter
|

Prof Mark Wahlqvist
AO, MD, FRACP
Immediate Past President
International Union of Nutritional
Science
|
|
Dr Antigone
Kouris
BSc (Biochem) (Melb), Hons (Nutrition)
(Deakin), Grad Dip Diet (Deakin),
PhD Med Nutrition (Monash)
Honorary
Nutrition Research Fellow,
Monash Asia Institute
|
WHAT'S
NEW IN RESEARCH
Fruit
and Vegetable Extract (Juice Plus+®)
improved serum
antioxidant levels and reduced oxidative
stress in Japanese men and women
In
the September Issue of APJCN Kawashima
et al tested whether dehydrated
concentrates from mixed fruit and vegetable
juices (Juice Plus+®) consumed for
28 days affected serum antioxidant and
folate status, plasma homocysteine levels
and markers for oxidative stress and
DNA damage. Japanese subjects (n=60;
age 27.8 yrs; BMI 22.1) were recruited
to participate in a double-blind placebo
controlled study and were randomized
into 2 groups of 30, matched for sex,
age, BMI and smoking status (39 males,
22 smokers; 21 females, 13 smokers).
In the absence of dietary modification,
supplementation with the fruit and vegetable
juice concentrate capsules proved to
be a highly bioavailable source of phytonutrients
significantly
increasing the concentration of serum
beta-carotene by 528%, lycopene by 80.2%,
vitamin E by 39.5% and serum folate
by 174.3% (which correlated with
a decrease of 20% in an undesirable
amino acid homocysteine which research
has shown is linked to heart disease).
Markers
of oxidative stress were also
reduced with serum lipid
peroxides declining -10.5% and urine
8OHdG decreasing -21.1%. Evaluation
of data from smokers only (n=17) after
28 days of active supplementation showed
comparable changes.
These
findings have important implications
for conditions where oxidative stress
or excessive free radicals are generated
e.g excessive exercise/athletes,
cancer, diabetes, heart disease, smoking,
pollution exposure.
However, this product should not replace
fresh fruit and vegetable consumption.
This
product has been studied by other research
groups with promising findings and there
are more studies underway. To date,
this product has been shown to positively
affect markers of proper immune
function, to reduce DNA damage and to
improve elasticity of arteries after
a high fat meal.
More info go to:
http://www.juiceplus.com.au
Diabetes
needs more Mg and Thiamin
Magnesium
The
newest magnesium/diabetes research comes
from the Karolinska Institute
in Stockholm, Sweden published
in the Journal
of Internal Medicine in 2007. The
Karolinska team (Larsson et al) reviewed
seven large studies. In each study,
dietary and medical records were followed
over a long period. Four studies tracked
diet only, while three studies reviewed
dietary habits and supplement intake.
The combined studies included more than
286,000 subjects. Six of the studies
found a significant association between
high magnesium intake and reduced risk
of type 2 diabetes. The sources of magnesium
- whether from diet or supplements combined
with diet - were equally effective.
Diabetes risk dropped by 15 percent
for every 100 mg increase in magnesium
intake.
Elevated
blood sugar levels can increase
the excretion of magnesium, chromium
and thiamin and there is emerging
evidence that levels of magnesium have
declined
in vegetables and fruits over the
last 50 years further compounding the
problem.
We
need about 400mg magnesium daily
(and people with diabetes or people
on diuretics or certain heart medications
probably need more than this). An easy
way to get 100mg of magnesium is to
include about
20 almonds or cashews or 30g pumpkin
seeds or 30g dark chocolate or 1 cup
dark green leafy vegetables. Interestingly,
1 cup of Turkish/Greek coffee (but not
instant coffee) has 90mg of magensium.
Food
sources of magnesium from "Food
Facts" by Professors M Wahlqvist
and D Briggs
More
info on Magnesium
Thiamin
Thornalley
et al found people with diabetes
expelled thiamin - vitamin B1 - from
their bodies at 15 times the normal
rate in a study of 94 people (published
in Diabetologia). The Warwick University
team said thiamine helped ward off complications
such as heart disease and eye problems.
It is the first time a deficiency of
the vitamin, which is found in meat,
yeast and grains, has been identified
in people with diabetes.
The authors concluded that supplementing
diets could be an effective way of minimising
the risk of these complications
since the requirement for thiamin would
be much higher in diabetes if excessive
amounts are excreted. It has been missed
in the past because of the way thiamin
levels were measured. Traditionally,
the activity of an enzyme called transketolase
in red blood cells has been used to
indicate thiamin levels. But the researchers
found that increased activity - usually
a sign of high thiamine levels - was
also associated with the body's response
to deficiency. Instead, the team measured
thiamin levels in blood plasma and found
concentrations were 76% lower in people
with type 1 diabetes and 75% lower in
people with type 2.
Thiamin is key to warding off vascular
problems such as kidney, retina
and nerve damage as well as heart disease
and stroke. It works by helping protect
cells against the effect of high glucose
levels. Trials are now being carried
out to see if supplementing diet with
thiamine could return levels to normal.
Food
sources of thiamin from "Food Facts"
by Professors M Wahlqvist and D Briggs
Regular/diet
soft drinks and caffeine linked to metabolic
syndrome?
Coffee's
impact on sugar metabolism is currently
unclear.
Coffee
has been linked to both a reduced
risk and increased risk of developing
diabetes in the general population but
it is not yet known whether this is
due to the caffeine content or other
compounds in coffee.
Furthermore,
caffeine may behave differently
in people with diabetes. The
Canadian Diabetes Association says
the following about coffee "Drinking
caffeine in large amounts as coffee
over a short period of time has been
shown to raise blood sugar. Caffeine
does this by enhancing the effect of
two hormones (adrenaline and glucagon).
These two hormones release stored sugar
from the liver resulting in high blood
sugar". This can be advantageous
in very active people like athletes
who need a surge of glucose (atheletes
been known to take caffeine supplements
for extra "energy") but may
be undesirable in the inactive person.
Emerging
studies are shedding more light on caffeine
metabolism.
In
the July 23, 2007 online issue of
the journal Circulation, Dhingra
et al linked the consumption of
more than one soft drink per day to
the risk of developing metabolic syndrome
or high levels of blood insulin (a precursor
to developing diabetes). The association
was found to be true for diet soft drinks
(i.e. zero calorie) as well as those
packed with sugar. The investigators
suggest that the culprit might not be
the soft drinks themselves, but instead
the eating habits that soft drink consumption
reflect. This study has fueled speculation
by suggesting that some unknown ingredient
(like caffeine) in diet sodas might
be contributing to metabolic syndrome
in susceptible individuals. The sweet
taste in the mouth (from sugar or artificial
sweeteners) may trigger the pancreas
to release insulin which could result
in hyperinsulinaemia (leading to metabolic
syndrome) if intake is chronic.
In
2006 Rush et al from the Auckland
University of Technology in New Zealand
published a study in Asia
Pacific
Journal of Clinical Nutrition showing
that an energy drink containing sugar
and added caffeine caused the body to
convert sugar into fat more rapidly
than lemonade. The energy drink tested
by Rush's team contained 28g sucrose
and 81mg caffeine per 250ml can, which
is similar to the amount of sugar in
soft drinks and caffeine in a brewed
cup of coffee. The author believes these
results could have huge implications
when you think about how much sugar
and caffeine people consume these days,
and the high rates of inactivity. For
the study, the New Zealand team recruited
10 healthy women aged 18 to 22 from
a range of ethnicities. The subjects
fasted overnight and were randomly given
either 250ml of an energy drink or lemonade
on the first day and the alternative
on the second day of testing. The sugar
in both drinks was absorbed rapidly
into the bloodstream - within a minute
and when caffeine
is also present the sugar is more quickly
converted to fat.
Sugar is a simple carbohydrate and evidence
from this study shows that, coupled
with a large amount of caffeine, the
body rapidly turns it into stored
fat. Professor Rush highlights
that simple carbohydrates and caffeine
were not such a large part of our diet
in the past. Inactive people have trouble
burning off excess energy and this leads
to weight gain.
The findings are supported by a recent
UK study, which found that caffeine
increased cyclists' absorption of carbohydrates
from a sports drink. But for
those consumers not doing much exercise,
these carbohydrates will be turned into
fat.
The study also raises questions about
the effects of consuming high-sugar
foods and highly caffeinated drinks
together in a short period of time.
Caffeine lasts in the body for
four to six hours, so people
who have caffeinated drinks, including
sugar-free energy drinks or coffee,
and then eat sugary food within this
time frame, may experience similar effects.
This study is limited by its small sample
size and the fact that the subjects
were all young women. But the results
are important as this area has not been
explored before. This area needs further
research, as well as the long term effects
of combined caffeine and sugar on sedentary
people's health.
The
Healthy Eating Team suggest you
limit caffeine containg beverages (to
about one serve a day) and have more
organic herbal and green tea - organic
teas have less pesticides and green
tea has 80% less caffeine than coffee.
More
info on coffee
More
info on soft drinks
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NUTRITION
RESOURCES ON THE WEB
Funny
but clever and insightful cartoon video
clips about sustainable animal and
organic farming
and what we can do to help the planet
The
MEATRIX - http://www.themeatrix.com/
STOREWARS
- http://www.storewars.org/flash/index.html
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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PRODUCTS