Chocolate (rec.food.chocolate) all topics related to eating and making chocolate such as cooking techniques, recipes, history, folklore & source recommendations.

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Default Health benefits of cocoa

Found on sci.med among the trash.


** Begin copied material from Usenet **

Subject: UV photoprotection / chocolate
Date: 3 Jul 2006 09:27:15 -0700
Organization: http://groups.google.com
Lines: 103
Message-ID: .com>


Flavanol-rich chocolate could improve skin from within

By Stephen Daniells


16/05/2006 - Cocoa beverages and food rich in flavanols could thicken
skin and reduce reddening by 25 per cent, say German scientists -
research sure to be welcomed by Europe's burgeoning oral beauty
products sector.

Growing awareness of the link between diet and health, and by extension
physical appearance, means that many consumers are receptive to the
concept of 'beauty from within'.
Indeed, a recent Datamonitor report predicted the overall European
cosmeceuticals market to grow to $4.4bn (=803.4bn) in 2009, up 5 per
cent from today. This includes all cosmetic products containing at
least one bio-active ingredient for the skin.

The new research from Germany that links skin health to cocoa flavanols
could well be readily accepted by the female-dominated consumer base.
The same Datamonitor report said that 63.7 per cent of women over the
age of 50 are prepared to spend more on cosmeceuticals.

"This study demonstrates that the regular consumption of a beverage
rich in flavanols can confer substantial photoprotection as well as
help maintain skin health by improving skin structure and function,"
wrote the researchers in the new issue of the Journal of Nutrition (Vol
136, pp 1565-1569).

Led by Wilhelm Stahl from the Heinrich-Heine University in Dusseldorf,
the researchers supplemented the regular diet of 24 female volunteers
with healthy, normal skin with either a high flavanol (326 milligrams
per day) or low flavanol (27 milligrams per day) cocoa powder drink
(dissolved in water). Both flavanol powders were provided by Mars.

Women were advised to continue their normal dietary habits, while other
dietary supplements were not to be taken during the 12-week
intervention trial. Sunbathing and use of tanning beds was also
forbidden.

On three separate occasions (weeks 0, 6, and 12), the skin of
volunteers was exposed to 1.25 times the UV irradiation dose required
to redden the skin (erythema) on the back and shoulder region.

The researchers found that the group receiving the high flavanol cocoa
beverage had a reduction in skin response to the UV radiation of 15 per
cent after week 6, and 25 per cent after week 12, compared to baseline.
The low flavanol receiving group did not affect UV sensitivity.

"We showed here for the first time, to our knowledge, that dietary
intervention with a cocoa beverage rich in flavanols decreased the
sensitivity of human skin toward UV light, which was determined by the
degree of erythema," wrote the researchers.

In addition to the reduction in sensitivity, the researchers also
observed an increase in subcutaneous blood flow for the high flavanol
group, as well as improving skin texture by increasing skin density (16
per cent), skin thickness (12 per cent), and skin hydration (28 per
cent), compared to baseline. No significant changes were observed in
the low flavanol group.

Polyphenols, such as the catechins found in cocoa, are reported to
absorb UV light, which may contribute to the reduction in UV
sensitivity. The compounds are also capable of scavenging reactive
oxygen species (ROS) that are formed during photo-oxidation.

The main flavanols found in the high flavanol beverage were epicatechin
(61 milligrams per day) and catechins (20 mg/d), while the low flavanol
drink contained about one tenth these concentrations.

"These amounts [in the high flavanol beverage] are similar to those
found in 100 grams of dark chocolate," explained the researchers.

The mechanisms by which the cocoa flavanols improve skin texture are
not known, but Prof Stahl and his colleagues suggest that the
flavanol-mediated rise in skin blood flow is likely to improve the
appearance of the skin.

This research is in-line with previous animal studies that reported tea
flavanols could inhibit UV-induced skin reddening, but Co-author Prof
Helmut Sies, also from the Heinrich-Heine University, stressed to
NutraIngredients.com that this is the first such study to show a
benefit in a human trial, and said that research in this area was
continuing.




Who loves ya.
Tom

[Some vegetarian references snipped]

** End copied material from Usenet **


later
bliss -- C O C O A Powered... (at california dot com)

--
bobbie sellers - a retired nurse in San Francisco

"It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.
It is by the beans of cocoa that the thoughts acquire speed,
the thighs acquire girth, the girth become a warning.
It is by theobromine alone I set my mind in motion."
--from Someone else's Dune spoof ripped to my taste.

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Posts: 2
Default Health benefits of cocoa

I thought this article about chocolate products for the skin was a
trip:
http://www.exploringchocolate.com/20...he_skin_1.html

I even saw a program from Canada recently that featured a spa where all
the treatments are made from chocolate.

Weird but true.

K.Swanson

bobbie sellers wrote:
> Found on sci.med among the trash.
>
>
> ** Begin copied material from Usenet **
>
> Subject: UV photoprotection / chocolate
> Date: 3 Jul 2006 09:27:15 -0700
> Organization: http://groups.google.com
> Lines: 103
> Message-ID: .com>
>
>
> Flavanol-rich chocolate could improve skin from within
>
> By Stephen Daniells
>
>
> 16/05/2006 - Cocoa beverages and food rich in flavanols could thicken
> skin and reduce reddening by 25 per cent, say German scientists -
> research sure to be welcomed by Europe's burgeoning oral beauty
> products sector.
>
> Growing awareness of the link between diet and health, and by extension
> physical appearance, means that many consumers are receptive to the
> concept of 'beauty from within'.
> Indeed, a recent Datamonitor report predicted the overall European
> cosmeceuticals market to grow to $4.4bn (=803.4bn) in 2009, up 5 per
> cent from today. This includes all cosmetic products containing at
> least one bio-active ingredient for the skin.
>
> The new research from Germany that links skin health to cocoa flavanols
> could well be readily accepted by the female-dominated consumer base.
> The same Datamonitor report said that 63.7 per cent of women over the
> age of 50 are prepared to spend more on cosmeceuticals.
>
> "This study demonstrates that the regular consumption of a beverage
> rich in flavanols can confer substantial photoprotection as well as
> help maintain skin health by improving skin structure and function,"
> wrote the researchers in the new issue of the Journal of Nutrition (Vol
> 136, pp 1565-1569).
>
> Led by Wilhelm Stahl from the Heinrich-Heine University in Dusseldorf,
> the researchers supplemented the regular diet of 24 female volunteers
> with healthy, normal skin with either a high flavanol (326 milligrams
> per day) or low flavanol (27 milligrams per day) cocoa powder drink
> (dissolved in water). Both flavanol powders were provided by Mars.
>
> Women were advised to continue their normal dietary habits, while other
> dietary supplements were not to be taken during the 12-week
> intervention trial. Sunbathing and use of tanning beds was also
> forbidden.
>
> On three separate occasions (weeks 0, 6, and 12), the skin of
> volunteers was exposed to 1.25 times the UV irradiation dose required
> to redden the skin (erythema) on the back and shoulder region.
>
> The researchers found that the group receiving the high flavanol cocoa
> beverage had a reduction in skin response to the UV radiation of 15 per
> cent after week 6, and 25 per cent after week 12, compared to baseline.
> The low flavanol receiving group did not affect UV sensitivity.
>
> "We showed here for the first time, to our knowledge, that dietary
> intervention with a cocoa beverage rich in flavanols decreased the
> sensitivity of human skin toward UV light, which was determined by the
> degree of erythema," wrote the researchers.
>
> In addition to the reduction in sensitivity, the researchers also
> observed an increase in subcutaneous blood flow for the high flavanol
> group, as well as improving skin texture by increasing skin density (16
> per cent), skin thickness (12 per cent), and skin hydration (28 per
> cent), compared to baseline. No significant changes were observed in
> the low flavanol group.
>
> Polyphenols, such as the catechins found in cocoa, are reported to
> absorb UV light, which may contribute to the reduction in UV
> sensitivity. The compounds are also capable of scavenging reactive
> oxygen species (ROS) that are formed during photo-oxidation.
>
> The main flavanols found in the high flavanol beverage were epicatechin
> (61 milligrams per day) and catechins (20 mg/d), while the low flavanol
> drink contained about one tenth these concentrations.
>
> "These amounts [in the high flavanol beverage] are similar to those
> found in 100 grams of dark chocolate," explained the researchers.
>
> The mechanisms by which the cocoa flavanols improve skin texture are
> not known, but Prof Stahl and his colleagues suggest that the
> flavanol-mediated rise in skin blood flow is likely to improve the
> appearance of the skin.
>
> This research is in-line with previous animal studies that reported tea
> flavanols could inhibit UV-induced skin reddening, but Co-author Prof
> Helmut Sies, also from the Heinrich-Heine University, stressed to
> NutraIngredients.com that this is the first such study to show a
> benefit in a human trial, and said that research in this area was
> continuing.
>
>
>
>
> Who loves ya.
> Tom
>
> [Some vegetarian references snipped]
>
> ** End copied material from Usenet **
>
>
> later
> bliss -- C O C O A Powered... (at california dot com)
>
> --
> bobbie sellers - a retired nurse in San Francisco
>
> "It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.
> It is by the beans of cocoa that the thoughts acquire speed,
> the thighs acquire girth, the girth become a warning.
> It is by theobromine alone I set my mind in motion."
> --from Someone else's Dune spoof ripped to my taste.


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