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The Right Combo: Getting the Most Health Benefits from Fruit Smoothies

Researchers Find Adding a Banana Decreased the Level of Flavanols in Smoothies

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澳门六合彩资料库 Davis researchers find that the right combination of blending fruits can give your body a nutritional boost. Photo shows banana and blueberry smoothie. (Getty)
New research shows that the right combination of blending fruits can give your body a nutritional boost. (Getty)

Smoothies can be a tasty and convenient way to get the important fruits and vegetables you need for a healthy diet. But is a banana and blueberry smoothie the best combo? Researchers at the University of California, Davis, suggest that blending certain ingredients in smoothies can influence whether your body is getting a nutritional boost.

today in the Royal Society of Chemistry鈥檚 journal Food and Function, used smoothies to test how various levels of polyphenol oxidase, an enzyme in many fruits and vegetables, affects the levels of flavanols in food to be absorbed by the body. Flavanols are a group of bioactive compounds that are good for your heart and cognitive health and are naturally found in apples, pears, blueberries, blackberries, grapes and cocoa 鈥 common smoothie ingredients.

鈥淲e sought to understand, on a very practical level, how a common food and food preparation like a banana-based smoothie could affect the availability of flavanols to be absorbed after intake,鈥 said lead author Javier Ottaviani, director of the Core Laboratory of Mars Edge, which is part of Mars, Inc., and an adjunct researcher with the 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Department of Nutrition.

Slice an apple or peel a banana and the fruit will quickly turn brown. That happens because of polyphenol oxidase, or PPO, an enzyme naturally present in those foods. The browning occurs when the food containing that enzyme is exposed to air, cut or bruised. The researchers wanted to know whether consuming freshly prepared smoothies made with different PPO-containing fruits impacted the amount of flavanols available to the body.

Bananas versus berries

The researchers had participants drink a smoothie made with banana, which has naturally high PPO activity, and a smoothie made with mixed berries, which have naturally low PPO activity. Participants also took a flavanol capsule as a control. Blood and urine samples were analyzed to measure how much flavanols were present in the body after ingesting the smoothie samples and capsule. The researchers found that those who drank the banana smoothie had 84% lower levels of flavanols in their body compared to the control.

鈥淲e were really surprised to see how quickly adding a single banana decreased the level of flavanols in the smoothie and the levels of flavanol absorbed in the body,鈥 Ottaviani said. 鈥淭his highlights how food preparation and combinations can affect the absorption of dietary compounds in foods.鈥

Info graphic shows what the study investigated, what it showed and what it means.

Last year, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics issued a , advising people to consume 400 to 600 milligrams of flavanols daily for cardiometabolic health. Ottaviani said for people who are trying to consume those flavanols, they should consider preparing smoothies by combining flavanol-rich fruits like berries with other ingredients that also have a low PPO activity like pineapple, oranges, mango or yogurt.

He also said bananas remain a great fruit to be eaten or consumed in smoothies. For those who want to consume smoothies with bananas, or other high PPO activity fruits and vegetables such as beet greens, the suggestion is to not combine them with flavanol-rich fruits such as berries, grapes and cocoa.

The findings of this study could spur future research into how other foods are prepared and the effects on flavanols, for example, Ottaviani said tea is a major dietary source of flavanols and depending on how it is prepared, a different amount of flavanols would be available for absorption.

鈥淭his is certainly an area that deserves more attention in the field of polyphenols and bioactive compounds in general,鈥 said Ottaviani.

Jodi Ensunsa, Reedmond Fong, Jennifer Kimball and Alan Crozier, all affiliated with the 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Department of Nutrition and researchers affiliated with the 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Department of Internal Medicine, University of Reading, King Saud University and Mars, Inc. contributed to the research.

The study was funded by a research grant from Mars, Inc., which collaborates with researchers to study potential benefits of cocoa flavanols for human health.

Media Resources

  • Javier Ottaviani, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis Department of Nutrition, jottaviani@ucdavis.edu
  • Amy Quinton, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis News and Media Relations, amquinton@ucdavis.edu
  • Tiffany Dobbyn, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, tadobbyn@ucdavis.edu

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