New research
conducted at the University of Tokyo suggests that pure maple syrup may promote
a healthy liver. The pilot study, conducted by Dr. Keiko Abe of the University
of Tokyo’s Graduate School of Agricultural and Life Sciences, showed that
healthy laboratory rats fed a diet in which some of the carbohydrate was
replaced with pure maple syrup from Canada yielded significantly better results
in liver function tests than the control groups fed a diet with a syrup mix
containing a similar sugar content as maple syrup. The results will be
published in the November, 2011 issue of Bioscience,
Biotechnology, and Biochemistry.
Although most
healthy individuals take liver function for granted, liver health is of great
importance because of the hundreds of vital functions it performs that are
essential to human life, which include storing energy (glycogen) and regulating
blood glucose, the production of certain amino acids (building blocks of
protein), filtering harmful substances from the blood. Liver disease not
related to alcohol consumption is estimated to affect 25% of people in the
United States, according to the American Liver Foundation. It shows up most
often in middle aged people who are overweight, have abnormal blood lipids and
diabetes or insulin resistance conditions when grouped together, are known as
metabolic syndrome.
“It is important to
understand the factors leading to impaired liver function – our lifestyle
choices including poor diet, stress and lack of exercise, as well as exposure
to environmental pollutants that produce tissue-damaging free radicals,” says
Dr. Melissa Palmer, clinical professor and medical director of hepatology at
New York University Plainview. “The preliminary results of this research are
encouraging and emphasize the importance of choosing a healthy diet to help
counteract the lifestyle and environmental factors that may impact liver
function, even our choice of a sweetener. In addition to Dr. Abe’s recent
findings, published research suggests that pure maple syrup may prove to be a
better choice of sweetener because it was found to be rich in polyphenolic
antioxidants and contains vitamins and minerals,” notes Palmer.
The animals were
evaluated using the latest analytical methods including gene expression
profiling called nutrigenomics. In the study, rats were fed diets consisting of
20% pure maple syrup, or 20% syrup mixture with similar sugar content as maple
syrup. After 11 days, the rats on the maple syrup diet showed significantly
decreased levels of liver enzymes AST, ALT and LDH in the blood, standard
biomarkers for evaluating liver function. The gene expression profiling
observations also suggest a mechanism whereby the maple syrup diet caused genes
involved in the production of harmful ammonia in the liver to down-regulate,
that is, to be less active.
“This research
contributes to our growing understanding of the incredible health potential of
maple syrup,” remarked Serge Beaulieu, President of the Federation of Quebec
Maple Syrup Producers. “We learned previously that maple syrup contains
antioxidant compounds that may actually help regulate glucose metabolism and
increase insulin release, possibly aiding in the management of type 2 diabetes.
And now Dr. Abe is exploring the relationship between maple syrup consumption
and liver health. Her current findings give us even more reason to enjoy our
maple syrup.”
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