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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 73, No. 1, 36-40, January 2001
© 2001 American Society for Clinical Nutrition


Original Research Communication

Chocolate procyanidins decrease the leukotriene-prostacyclin ratio in humans and human aortic endothelial cells1,2,3

Derek D Schramm, Janice F Wang, Roberta R Holt, Jodi L Ensunsa, Jana L Gonsalves, Sheryl A Lazarus, Harold H Schmitz, J Bruce German and Carl L Keen

1 From the Departments of Nutrition, Internal Medicine, and Food Science, University of California, Davis, and Analytic and Applied Sciences, MARS Inc, Hackettstown, NJ.

Background: Polyphenolic phytochemicals inhibit vascular and inflammatory processes that contribute to disease. These effects are hypothesized to result from polyphenol-mediated alterations in cellular eicosanoid synthesis.

Objective: The objective was to determine and compare the ability of cocoa procyanidins to alter eicosanoid synthesis in human subjects and cultured human aortic endothelial cells.

Design: After an overnight fast, 10 healthy subjects (4 men and 6 women) consumed 37 g low-procyanidin (0.09 mg/g) and high-procyanidin (4.0 mg/g) chocolate; the treatments were separated by 1 wk. The investigation had a randomized, blinded, crossover design. Plasma samples were collected before treatment and 2 and 6 h after treatment. Eicosanoids were quantitated by enzyme immunoassay. Endothelial cells were treated in vitro with procyanidins to determine whether the effects of procyanidin in vivo were associated with procyanidin-induced alterations in endothelial cell eicosanoid synthesis.

Results: Relative to the effects of the low-procyanidin chocolate, high-procyanidin chocolate induced increases in plasma prostacyclin (32%; P < 0.05) and decreases in plasma leukotrienes (29%; P < 0.04). After the in vitro procyanidin treatments, aortic endothelial cells synthesized twice as much 6-keto-prostaglandin F1{alpha} (P < 0.01) and 16% less leukotriene (P < 0.05) as did control cells. The in vitro and in vivo effects of procyanidins on plasma leukotriene-prostacyclin ratios in culture medium were also comparable: decreases of 58% and 52%, respectively.

Conclusion: Data from this short-term investigation support the concept that certain food-derived flavonoids can favorably alter eicosanoid synthesis in humans, providing a plausible hypothesis for a mechanism by which they can decrease platelet activation in humans.

Key Words: Chocolate • eicosanoids • flavonoids • endothelial cells • phytochemicals • leukotrienes




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