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Review
. 2013 May;15(5):324.
doi: 10.1007/s11883-013-0324-x.

Polyphenols, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease

Affiliations
Review

Polyphenols, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease

Christy C Tangney et al. Curr Atheroscler Rep. 2013 May.

Abstract

Polyphenols are compounds found in foods such as tea, coffee, cocoa, olive oil, and red wine and have been studied to determine if their intake may modify cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Historically, biologic actions of polyphenols have been attributed to antioxidant activities, but recent evidence suggests that immunomodulatory and vasodilatory properties of polyphenols may also contribute to CVD risk reduction. These properties will be discussed, and recent epidemiological evidence and intervention trials will be reviewed. Further identification of polyphenols in foods and accurate assessment of exposures through measurement of biomarkers (i.e., polyphenol metabolites) could provide the needed impetus to examine the impact of polyphenol-rich foods on CVD intermediate outcomes (especially those signifying chronic inflammation) and hard endpoints among high risk patients. Although we have mechanistic insight into how polyphenols may function in CVD risk reduction, further research is needed before definitive recommendations for consumption can be made.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Major classes of dietary polyphenols and example chemical structures. The Figure does not include polyphenols that are categorized as “other polyphenols.” Adapted from Spencer et al. [10].

References

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