27 research outputs found

    Nutritional intervention and impact of polyphenol on glycohaemoglobin (HbA1c) in non-diabetic and type 2 diabetic subjects: systematic review and meta-analysis

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    Polyphenols have been extensively studied for their antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Recently, their antiglycative actions by oxidative stress modulation have been linked to prevention of diabetes and associated complications. This paper assesses the evidence for polyphenol interventions on glycohaemoglobin (HbA1c) in non-diabetic, pre-diabetic and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) subjects. A systematic review of polyphenols clinical trials on HbA1c in humans was performed according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Thirty-six controlled randomized trials with HbA1c values were included. Polyphenols (extracts, supplements, foods), were supplemented (28Ā mg to 1.5g) for 0.7 to 12 months. Combining all subjects (n=1954, mean baseline HbA1c=7.03%, 53Ā mmol/mol), polyphenol supplementation significantly (p<0.001) lowered HbA1c% by -0.53Ā±0.12 units (-5.79Ā±0.13Ā mmol/mol). This reduction was significant (p<0.001) in T2DM subjects, specifically (n=1426, mean baseline HbA1c=7.44%, 58Ā mmol/mol), with HbA1c% lowered by -0.21Ā±0.04 units (-2.29Ā±0.4Ā mmol/mol). Polyphenol supplementation had no significant effect (p>0.21) in the non-diabetic (n=258, mean baseline HbA1c=5.47%, 36Ā mmol/mol) and the pre-diabetic subjects (n=270, mean baseline HbA1c=6.06%, 43Ā mmol/mol) strata: -0.39Ā±0.27 HbA1c% units (-4.3Ā±0.3Ā mmol/mol), and -0.38Ā±0.31 units (-4.2Ā±0.31Ā mmol/mol), respectively. In conclusion, polyphenols can successfully reduce HbA1c in T2DM, without any intervention at glycaemia, and could contribute to the prevention of diabetes complications
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