Journal of Functional Foods (Jan 2020)

Anthocyanin-enriched bilberry extract attenuates glycaemic response in overweight volunteers without changes in insulin

  • Mahasin Alnajjar,
  • Sisir Kumar Barik,
  • Charles Bestwick,
  • Fiona Campbell,
  • Morven Cruickshank,
  • Freda Farquharson,
  • Grietje Holtrop,
  • Graham Horgan,
  • Petra Louis,
  • Kim-Marie Moar,
  • Wendy R Russell,
  • Lorraine Scobbie,
  • Nigel Hoggard

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64
p. 103597

Abstract

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This study investigated the effect of a three week supplementation of bilberry extract on glucose metabolism. Overweight volunteers (n = 16; BMI 31) were given three capsules of either 0.47 g bilberry extract (36% (w/w) anthocyanins) or placebo per day for three weeks in a double blinded cross over intervention.The ingestion of the bilberry extract decreased the OGTT AUCi for glucose (20%; p = 0.008) but not for insulin compared with the placebo. There was no change in anti-inflammatory markers (hsCRP, MCP-1, leptin), vascular health markers (Apo A1, sVCAM-1, sICAM-1), reducing potential/ radical scavenging capacity or faecal bacterial microbiota. In vitro studies showed that the bilberry extract decreased α-amylase activity (p < 0.0001), α-glucosidase activity (p < 0.0001) and glucose uptake (p < 0.0001).This study demonstrates that the ingestion of a bilberry extract over a three week intervention period reduces postprandial glycaemia without changes in insulin. This is probably due to reduced rates of carbohydrate digestion and/or absorption.

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