Availability of micronutrients from dried, encapsulated fruit and vegetable preparations: a study in healthy volunteers

A R Leeds, E A E Ferris, J Staley, R Ayesh, F Ross

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background High levels of consumption of fruit and vegetables, which contain antioxidant nutrients including vitamins C and E as well as beta-carotene, are associated with reduced rates of atherosclerotic arterial disease and some cancers. Low plasma levels of these micronutrients are associated with an increased risk of chronic degenerative disease. While increasing consumption of fruit and vegetables would be desirable, many factors including cost tend to prevent this. Preparations of the active components of fruit and vegetables encapsulated to achieve convenience may contribute to solving this problem. Aims This study was designed to determine whether two such supplements prepared from dehydrated fruit and vegetable extracts (Juice Plus+(TM) Fruit and Juice Plus+(TM) Vegetable) would result in elevation in blood concentrations of antioxidants to levels associated with lower disease risk. Methods Sixteen healthy subjects (eight male, eight female, aged 18-52 years) were screened to exclude disease and to exclude any individual with a serum beta-carotene below 0.05 mu mol L-1, and were divided into two groups of eight, each to consume either the fruit or vegetable preparation. Four days before administration of the capsules the subjects commenced a low beta-carotene diet. Venous blood samples for determination of vitamin C, vitamin E (as alpha-tocopherol) and beta-carotene were taken in the morning on days 0, 2, 4, 6 and 7, after a 10-h fast. Two capsules of either the fruit preparation (containing vitamin E 30 mg, vitamin C 150 mg and beta-carotene 6 mg) or vegetable preparation (containing vitamin E 30 mg, vitamin C 50 mg and beta-carotene 9 mg) were taken on days 0-6 inclusive with a 610-kcal breakfast (47% energy from fat). Results Serum beta-carotene levels rose significantly by 0.56 mu mol L-1 and 0.54 mu mol L-1 after fruit and vegetable preparations, respectively, by day 7, vitamin E levels rose significantly by 3.1 mu mol L-1 after the fruit preparation but not after the vegetable preparation and vitamin C rose significantly from 28 to 62 mu mol L-1, and from 32 to 50 mu mol L-1 after the fruit and vegetable preparations, respectively. Plasma malondialdehyde, regarded as a general indicator of peroxidation, fell significantly by 19 x 10(-5) mu mol L-1 (about a 40% reduction) in both treatment groups. Conclusions These results indicate that concentrated extracts of fruits and vegetables can raise blood antioxidant levels into the ranges associated with reduced risk of disease and that this reduces the concentration of a general measure of lipid peroxidation. Further studies, especially in those with disease characterized by increased oxidative stress, are indicated.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)21 - 27
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2000

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Availability of micronutrients from dried, encapsulated fruit and vegetable preparations: a study in healthy volunteers'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this