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SCIENCE INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Agriculture
Honey -- the darker the better
-- has potential as dietary antioxidant
Jim Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
4/8/02
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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| Nicki
Engeseth, a professor of food chemistry, is researching the
health benefits of honey. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Two new University of Illinois studies are sweet news to honey
lovers. One shows that honeys antioxidant qualities preserve meat
without compromising taste. A just-published study says that honey
at least based on work done on human blood in the lab slows the
oxidation of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), a process that leads to
atherosclerotic plaque deposition.
Like a UI study in 1999, researchers found in both studies that dark-colored
honey, especially buckwheat, provided more protective punch than lighter-colored
honeys. "It still is too early to say definitively, but honey seems
to have the potential to serve as a dietary antioxidant," said
principal researcher Nicki Engeseth, a professor of food chemistry in
the UI College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
The newest study published online April 6 in the Journal of Agricultural
& Food Chemistry is the first to look at honeys effect
on human blood. The study also found, using a much more precise method
than the one used in 1999, that honeys antioxidants are equal
to those in many fruits and vegetables in their ability to counter the
degenerating activity of highly reactive molecules known as free radicals.
In January, Engeseth and Jason McKibben, a researcher with Anheuser
Busch in Santa Monica, Calif., reported in the same journal that honey
was more effective than traditional preservatives (butylated hydroxytoluene
and tocopherol) in slowing oxidation in cooked, refrigerated ground
turkey. While the meat browned during cooking more extensively than
traditionally preserved products, taste was not negatively affected.
For the just-published study, Engeseth and Nele Gheldof, a doctoral
student in the department of food science and human nutrition, measured
the antioxidant and phenolic contents in honeys taken from seven floral
sources.
The study covered acacia, buckwheat, clover, fireweed, Hawaiian Christmas
berry, soybean and tupelo honeys. Researchers used the oxygen radical
absorbance capacity (ORAC) assay, a tool that for the past decade has
been widely used to analyze the same components in fruits, vegetables
and wines. Darker honeys had the highest values.
"We got ORAC values ranging from 3 to 17," Engeseth said.
"Commonly consumed fruits and vegetables generally range from 0.5
to 16, based on a per gram basis. This finding is significant, because
it clearly shows that there are antioxidants in the honey. If you ate
as much honey as you did of melon, for example, you would be getting
a similar dose of
antioxidants in your diet."
Is such a scenario likely? No, but the idea that honey packs healthy
quantities of antioxidants does strengthen the idea of using honey as
sugar substitute, Engeseth said.
Engeseth and Gheldof obtained blood samples from healthy human volunteers
coming off a 12-hour fast. To the blood, they added the various honey
varieties in an experiment to watch honeys impact on LDL, the
so-called bad cholesterol. In test samples, they also added copper to
stimulate lipoprotein oxidation. Using a spectrometer, they found that
honey the darker the better dramatically slowed the rate
of formation of conjugated dienes, products of oxidation related to
LDL in blood
.
"The one thing about this study is that even though it involved
human blood in a test-tube assay, it does show that if honey is present
it can act positively," Engeseth said.
Follow-up studies, either in progress or undergoing data analyses, will
shed more light on the exact phenolic compounds in honey and on how
effectively honey that is consumed prevents oxidation in the blood of
human subjects.
Phenolic compounds are phytochemicals, which are non-nutritious compounds
in foods that may carry specific disease-fighting abilities. UI researchers
also have also found a significant correlation of phenolic content and
antioxidant capacity of honey.
Both recent studies were partially funded by the National Honey Board.
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