Chocolate is a powerful ex vivo and in vivo antioxidant, an antiatherosclerotic agent in an animal model, and a significant contributor to antioxidants in the European and American Diets.
@article{Vinson2006ChocolateIA,
title={Chocolate is a powerful ex vivo and in vivo antioxidant, an antiatherosclerotic agent in an animal model, and a significant contributor to antioxidants in the European and American Diets.},
author={Joe A Vinson and John Proch and Pratima Bose and Sean Muchler and Pamela Taffera and Donna Shuta and Najwa Samman and Gabriel Agbor Agbor},
journal={Journal of agricultural and food chemistry},
year={2006},
volume={54 21},
pages={
8071-6
}
}Chocolate today is often viewed as a food or snack with little nutritional value. The high saturated fat content of chocolate has also contributed to the belief that its consumption increases the risk of heart disease. However, recent human studies have proven that chocolate has beneficial effects on some pathogenic mechanisms of heart disease such as endothelial function and blood pressure. Although the antioxidant properties of chocolate have been known for some time, there has been no…
180 Citations
Chocolate/cocoa and human health: a review.
- MedicineThe Netherlands journal of medicine
- 2013
In many studies, contradictory results and concerns about methodological issues have made it hard for health professionals and the public to understand the available evidence on chocolate's effects on health.
Cardio Protective Effect of Dark Chocolate Components: Mechanisms of Actions
- Chemistry
- 2014
Chocolate is made from the seeds of a tropical rainforest tree called � Theobroma cacao �. When compared with other food sources based on oxygen radical absorbance capacity (ORAC) mea surement, dark…
How does chocolate contribute to cardiovascular health
- Biology
- 2012
The vast amount of epidemiological evidence suggests a definite link between cocoa from chocolate and cardiovascular health, and greater research into this area will definitely be beneficial.
Polyphenols from Cocoa and Vascular Health—A Critical Review
- Biology, MedicineInternational journal of molecular sciences
- 2009
In order to determine potential health benefits of cocoa polyphenols large scale, long term, randomized, placebo controlled studies, (ideally with a cross-over design) as well as prospective studies are warranted.
Food of the Gods: the Role of Chocolate in Cardiovascular Health
- Medicine
- 2012
The benefits of chocolate in cardiovascular health have long been considered since a single observational study in Panama found an indigenous people who suffered no cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) yet…
Cardioprotective effects of cocoa: clinical evidence from randomized clinical intervention trials in humans.
- BiologyMolecular nutrition & food research
- 2013
Scientific evidence supports a cause and effect relationship between consumption of cocoa flavonoids and the maintenance of normal endothelium-dependent vasodilation, which contributes to normal blood flow, but larger randomized trials are required to definitively establish the impact of cocoa and cocoa products consumption on hard cardiovascular outcomes.
Antioxidant effects of cocoa and cocoa products ex vivo and in vivo: is there evidence from controlled intervention studies?
- BiologyCurrent opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care
- 2010
Recent clinical trials do not provide sufficient evidence for an essential contribution of cocoa products to the overall antioxidant defense, and any recommendations for cocoa intake within preventive and therapeutic measures are presently not reasonable.
Effects of chocolate supplementation on metabolic and cardiovascular parameters in ApoE3L mice fed a high-cholesterol atherogenic diet.
- Medicine, BiologyMolecular nutrition & food research
- 2013
The two chocolate preparations showed unfavorable, but different effects on cardiometabolic health in E3L mice, which dissimilarities may be related to differences in chocolate composition.
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