Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7595101 | Food Chemistry | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The potential benefits of tomato-rich diets for the cardiovascular system have been related to plasma concentrations of carotenoids. In addition, the bioavailability of carotenoids from foods depends on their chemical structure, processing and the food matrix. Our aim was to evaluate the effect of adding oil to tomato juice (not treated with heat) on the bioavailability of plasma carotenoids and postprandial lipid response. In a randomized, controlled, crossover feeding trial, eleven healthy volunteers were assigned to receive a single ingestion of 750Â g of tomato juice (TJ) containing 10% of refined olive oil/70Â kg body weight (BW) and 750Â g of TJ without oil/70Â kg BW on two different days. All lycopene isomers increased significantly in subjects consuming TJ with oil, reaching the maximum concentration at 24Â h. LDL cholesterol and total cholesterol decreased significantly 6Â h after the consumption of TJ with oil, which significantly correlated with an increase of trans-lycopene and 5-cis-lycopene, respectively.
Keywords
AUC0–24HDL-CMTBELDL-CPTFEHPLC-MS/MSTomato juicestandard deviationcardiovascular diseaseCVDbody mass indexBMIBlood pressureLycopenemethyl tert-Butyl etherAbsorption ratebody weightLipid profilepolytetrafluoroethylenetotal cholesterolhigh density lipoprotein cholesterollow density lipoprotein cholesterol
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Sara Arranz, Miriam MartÃnez-Huélamo, Anna Vallverdu-Queralt, Palmira Valderas-Martinez, Montse Illán, Emilio Sacanella, Elvira Escribano, Ramon Estruch, Rosa Ma. Lamuela-Raventos,