Nutrients (Sep 2024)

Consumption of Sylimarin, Pyrroloquinoline Quinone Sodium Salt and Myricetin: Effects on Alcohol Levels and Markers of Oxidative Stress—A Pilot Study

  • Gerardo Bosco,
  • Alessandra Vezzoli,
  • Andrea Brizzolari,
  • Matteo Paganini,
  • Tommaso Antonio Giacon,
  • Fabio Savini,
  • Maristella Gussoni,
  • Michela Montorsi,
  • Cinzia Dellanoce,
  • Simona Mrakic-Sposta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16172965
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 17
p. 2965

Abstract

Read online

Background: Alcohol abuse is one of the most common causes of mortality worldwide. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy of a treatment in reducing circulating ethanol and oxidative stress biomarkers. Methods: Twenty wine-drinking subjects were investigated in a randomized controlled, single-blind trial (ClinicalTrials.gov. Identifier: NCT06548503; Ethical Committee of the University of Padova (HEC-DSB/12-2023) to evaluate the effect of the intake of a product containing silymarin, pyrroloquinoline quinone sodium salt, and myricetin (referred to as Si.Pi.Mi. for this project) on blood alcohol, ethyl glucuronide (EtG: marker for alcohol consumption) and markers of oxidative stress levels (Reactive Oxygen Species—ROS, Total Antioxidant Capacity—TAC, CoQ10, thiols redox status, 8-isoprostane, NO metabolites, neopterin, and uric acid). The effects of the treatment versus placebo were evaluated acutely and after 1 week of supplementation in blood and/or saliva and urine samples. Results: Si.Pi.Mi intake reduced circulating ethanol after 120 min (−33%). Changes in oxidative stress biomarkers, particularly a TAC (range +9–12%) increase and an 8-isoprostane (marker of lipidic peroxidation) decrease (range −22–27%), were observed too. Conclusion: After the administration of Si.Pi.Mi, the data seemed to suggest a better alcohol metabolism and oxidative balance in response to wine intake. Further verification is requested.

Keywords