Tag Archive for: polyphenols

Do You Need a Fruit-and-Vegetable Concentrate?

Vegetable-concentrate and fruit-concentrate products are popular now, judging by the number of ads on TV and the web; the implication is that they can replace real fruits and vegetables in the diet.

For the fruit concentrate, manufacturers remove all the fiber and water, yielding concentrates from various fruits and phytonutrient blends plus aloe vera. The supplements include 2,000 mg per serving with 17 ingredients; that works out to 120 mg per ingredient if equally divided. Are those amounts significant, especially after removing the fiber and water? Hard to say without a lot of research on each nutrient to find the effective amount, both individually and combined; for example, we don’t know if there’s an interaction between the nutrients that affects absorption and utilization.

One more type of concentrate would be single-nutrient supplements, such as a specific type of curcuminoids from a certain species of turmeric. Manufacturing is not my area; it takes some hard-core chemistry to figure out how to get the nutrient you want.

Here’s an example: curcumin is extracted from the dried root of the rhizome Curcuma longa. After drying, the process of extraction requires the raw material to be ground into powder and washed with a solvent that selectively extracts coloring matter, the curcuminoids, which then can be put into supplement form. Might there be some vitamins and minerals remaining? Probably, but that isn’t the point of the supplement. The curcuminoids are.

The Bottom Line

At the end of the day, our bodies need the fiber and water from plants to feed our microbiome. That’s why these types of products complement the vegetables and fruits you’re supposed to be eating—they don’t replace them.

I think the best way to get the best of both worlds is eating the five to ten servings of fruits and vegetables you’re supposed to eat, plus taking a multivitamin-multimineral with plant concentrates as insurance to make sure you get all the basic nutrients. If you know you’re not going to be eating as you should for a while, like an accountant working 14-hour days at tax time or a student cramming for finals, a fruit-and-vegetable concentrate might be a good addition. Then add specific concentrate-phytonutrient blends you may be missing in your diet; for example, if you hate mushrooms, take a mushroom-blend supplement. Now you’ve got all your bases covered.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Reference: www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/agns/pdf/jecfa/cta/61/Curcumin.pdf

Vitamins and Minerals in Supplements

I got an interesting question last week about a supplement that contained a blend of fruit and vegetable concentrates: vitamins and minerals aren’t included on the label, so are they in there? The answer is probably. It all comes down to the purpose of the supplement.

A concentrate is typically the entire vegetable or fruit with the water removed by a dehydration process; whatever is in the plant will be in the concentrate. You could liken this to drying a fresh herb to use as a spice. A more sophisticated process is to remove some of the fiber as well; that would remove solids, but some vitamins and minerals could remain.

Another variation is if a company were to focus on a phytonutrient blend, such as the polyphenols and hesperidin from citrus fruit. They would standardize the supplement to the amounts of those phytonutrients but wouldn’t be concerned about vitamins or minerals unless they met a percentage of the RDA.

There is still more precision in concentrate and phytonutrient supplements, and we’ll talk about them on Saturday.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Remember the Berries!

Did you ever forget where you put something? Do you ever have trouble remembering the right word when you’re trying to explain something? Did those events ever make you worry about your memory? Based on the questions I get, many of you are concerned. The second study examined what foods may help your memory.

Researchers tested a group of over 200 subjects using a variety of short-term memory and cognitive tests. They then gave the subjects in the experimental group a blend of polyphenols from grapes and blueberries in capsule form with a total of 258 mg of concentrates daily; the control subjects got a placebo.

After six months, they retested all the subjects. They did not find an overall effect. But when they examined those who began with the poorest memory and learning ability, those subjects gained the most benefit. The researchers estimated that some subjects gained the equivalent of 14 years in memory ability.

Where do you buy this blend? It’s not available in this exact blend that I could find. However, a half cup of red grapes has 100 mg of polyphenols while blueberries have about 400 mg of polyphenols. The amounts will vary by the variety of grape, but that’s something you can start doing today to improve your memory. While we don’t know if other berries will have the same impact, any berry has polyphenols. Even if they don’t help with memory, they’ll certainly have other health benefits.

We’ll wrap this up on Saturday. There’s still time to take the survey to help me decide where I’m going in 2020.

What are you prepared to do today?

        Dr. Chet

Reference: The Journals of Gerontology: https://doi.org/10.1093/gerona/gly166.

The Bottom Line on Chlorpyrifos

Today’s health news is full of controversy, some based on reality but most not. Typically, I would have concluded that the op-ed piece was just that: an opinion that exaggerated the facts to put forth a specific point of view. But before I go further, let me be clear: I’m not in favor of any pesticides if they can possibly be avoided. But we also live with the necessity of feeding billions of people and can’t afford to lose crops; we judge fruits and vegetables by appearance because we no longer know the grower personally. There may be some chemicals that are necessary to get that done. The issue comes down to the question of safety. That’s where all the research I read comes into play.

PON1

When I attempted to find the statistics on chlorpyrifos, I came across a large body of research that examined how organophosphates such as chlorpyrifos were eliminated by the body. The paraoxonase 1 gene (PON1) makes enzymes that help the liver and kidney detoxify chemicals such as chlorpyrifos (1). Research on several groups of subjects show that if exposure doesn’t exceed the detoxification capacity of the body, the current tolerance limits are safe for most people.

The problem is similar to what we find in other genes: there are mutations of the PON1 gene that affect the ability of the gene to produce enough enzymes to detoxify the body effectively (2). If the body isn’t able to detoxify itself, the amounts of chlorpyrifos in the body can exceed safe levels. That means that those with the PON1 mutation may be most at risk for chlorpyrifos exposure.

Or maybe not. Again it comes down to exposure. In a study of farm workers chronically exposed to chlorpyrifos, there was no difference in the gene mutations with the ability to detoxify (3). In another study, blood samples with normal and mutated PON1 genes were exposed to high and low levels of chlorpyrifos; the high levels negatively affected the mutated version of the PON1. The low levels, reflective of typical environmental exposure, showed no negative effect (4).

The issue is one of exposure, whether someone has the PON1 mutation or not. Research shows that mothers and children who live in agricultural areas are more at risk to having higher levels of organophosphates in their systems. What isn’t clear is the impact of genetic mutations that result in health issues.

In a recently published paper, researchers found that infants born to mothers with the PON1 mutation and exposed to environmental organophosphates had smaller head circumferences relative to size (5). Whether that translates to reduced IQ or other neurological conditions remains to be seen.

The Impact of Nutrients on Chlorpyrifos Exposure

Several studies demonstrated potential benefits of nutrients on chlorpyrifos exposure. PON1 is also related to cardiovascular health. In a study of over 400 subjects, those subjects with a mutated version of the PON1 gene and with higher amounts of polyphenols from fruit and vegetable intake did better in measures of cardiovascular risk such as high cholesterol (6).

In another study, subjects who consumed organic honey as a supplement experienced less damage and better DNA repair after chronic exposure to organophosphates (7). The polyphenols in the honey were identified as the primary factor related to the repair process.

Finally, in a study of pregnant women and their offspring, researchers examined the affect of folic acid intake in those women who were and were not exposed to organophosphates (8). Those who had a greater than 800 mcg intake during their first month of pregnancy when exposed to pesticides had fewer children with autism spectrum disorder.

While all of this research is recent, it seems clear that nutrients can have a positive impact on people who are exposed to organophosphates such as chlorpyrifos and other pesticides.

The Bottom Line

When I began the research on one statement in an op-ed piece, I never imagined it would end up here, but you go where the research takes you. While this research trip took us to the USDA, the PON1 gene, and some nutrients that can be protective against exposure to chlorpyrifos, one fact I was unable to find was that we are exposed to excess amounts from the fruits and vegetables we eat. That statement in the op-ed was false. But in that journey, we learned a lot. It’s not where you begin; it’s where you finish.

Four final points:

  • I think the ban on chlorpyrifos should be reinstated. Tolerance limits doesn’t mean it’s safe for everyone, and not every harmful impact has been examined.
  • Whether the discontinuance is reinstated or not, eat your fruits and vegetables after you wash them carefully. The value of the nutrients for your health exceeds any risk from chemicals that may be present.
  • Add some extra insurance by taking your supplements.
  • If you’re a golfer, you may want to learn the course’s pesticide schedule and avoid those days.

What are you prepared to do today?

Dr. Chet

 

References:
1. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/5444.
2. Toxicology. 2013 May 10;307:115-22. doi: 10.1016/j.tox.2012.07.011.
3. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2012;265(3):308-15. doi:10.1016/j.taap.2012.08.031.
4. Toxicol Lett. 2014 Oct 1;230(1):57-61. doi: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2014.07.029.
5. Ann Glob Health. 2016; 82(1): 100–110. doi:10.1016/j.aogh.2016.01.009.
6. J Transl Med. 2016 Jun 23;14(1):186. doi: 10.1186/s12967-016-0941-6.
7. Mol Nutr Food Res. 2016 Oct;60(10):2243-2255.
8. Environ Health Perspect. 2017 Sep 8;125(9):097007. doi: 10.1289/EHP604.