1. Increasing the Vegetable Intake Dose Is Associated with a Rise in Plasma Carotenoids without Modifying Oxidative Stress or Inflammation in Overweight or Obese Postmenopausal Women
- Author
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Betsy C. Wertheim, Tracy E. Crane, Mark Kroggel, Julie L. West, Chieri Kubota, and Cynthia A. Thomson
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Nutrition and Disease ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Urine ,Overweight ,Dinoprost ,medicine.disease_cause ,Body Mass Index ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Vegetables ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Carotenoid ,Aged ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cross-Over Studies ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,biology ,business.industry ,Lysine ,C-reactive protein ,Arizona ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Carotenoids ,Crossover study ,Postmenopause ,Oxidative Stress ,C-Reactive Protein ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Chronic Disease ,biology.protein ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Biomarkers ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
The optimal amount of vegetable consumption required to reduce chronic disease risk is widely debated. Intervention trials evaluating biological activity of vegetables at various doses are limited. We conducted a 3-dose, crossover feeding trial to test the hypothesis that vegetable intake is associated in a dose-dependent manner with increased plasma carotenoids and subsequently reduced oxidative stress and inflammation in 49 overweight, postmenopausal women. Participants were assigned in random order to 2 (130 g), 5 (287 g), and 10 (614 g) daily servings of fresh, greenhouse-grown vegetables for 3-wk intervals with a 4-wk washout period between treatments. Plasma total carotenoids significantly increased from 1.63 to 2.07 μmol/L with a dose of 2 vegetable servings, from 1.49 to 2.84 μmol/L with a dose of 5 vegetable servings, and from 1.40 to 4.42 μmol/L with a dose of 10 vegetable servings (pre-post paired ttests, all P < 0.001). The change during each feeding period increased with each dose level (P < 0.001). Urine concentrations of 8-isoprostane F2α, hexanoyl lysine, and serum high sensitivity C-reactive protein were not affected by any administered vegetable dose. In this variable-dose vegetable study, a dose-response for plasma carotenoids was demonstrated without significant change in oxidative stress and inflammation in overweight, postmenopausal women.
- Published
- 2011
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