Cocoa 'Vitamin' Health Benefits Could Outshine Penicillin
Science Daily — The health benefits of epicatechin, a compound
found in cocoa, are so striking that it may rival penicillin and
anaesthesia in terms of importance to public health, reports Marina
Murphy in Chemistry & Industry, the magazine of the SCI. Norman
Hollenberg, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, told
C&I that epicatechin is so important that it should be considered
a vitamin.
Hollenberg has spent years studying the benefits of cocoa drinking
on the Kuna people in Panama. He found that the risk of 4 of the
5 most common killer diseases: stroke, heart failure, cancer and
diabetes, is reduced to less then 10% in the Kuna. They can drink
up to 40 cups of cocoa a week. Natural cocoa has high levels of epicatechin.
'If these observations predict the future, then we can say without
blushing that they are among the most important observations in the
history of medicine,' Hollenberg says. 'We all agree that penicillin
and anaesthesia are enormously important. But epicatechin could potentially
get rid of 4 of the 5 most common diseases in the western world,
how important does that make epicatechin?... I would say very important'
Nutrition expert Daniel Fabricant says that Hollenberg's results,
although observational, are so impressive that they may even warrant
a rethink of how vitamins are defined. Epicatechin does not currently
meet the criteria. Vitamins are defined as essential to the normal
functioning, metabolism, regulation and growth of cells and deficiency
is usually linked to disease. At the moment, the science does not
support epicatechin having an essential role. But, Fabricant, who
is vice president scientific affairs at the Natural Products Association,
says: 'the link between high epicatechin consumption and a decreased
risk of killer disease is so striking, it should be investigated
further. It may be that these diseases are the result of epicatechin
deficiency,' he says.
Currently, there are only 13 essential vitamins. An increase in
the number of vitamins would provide significant opportunity for
nutritional companies to expand their range of products. Flavanols
like epicatechin are removed for commercial cocoas because they tend
to have a bitter taste. So there is huge scope for nutritional companies
to develop epicatechin supplements or capsules
Epicatechin is also found in teas, wine, chocolate and some fruit
and vegetables.
[Chemistry & Industry magazine (http://www.chemind.org) from
SCI delivers news and comment from the interface between science
and business. As well as covering industry and science, it focuses
on developments that will be of significant commercial interest in
five- to ten-years time. Published twice-monthly and free to SCI
Members, it also carries authoritative features and reviews. Opinion-formers
worldwide respect Chemistry & Industry for its independent insight.]
March 12, 2007

back to top
Cocoa, but Not Tea, Lowers Blood Pressure
News Author: Shelley Wood
CME Author: Désirée Lie, MD, MSEd
April 11, 2007 — More happy justification for chocolate lovers:
blood pressure (BP) responds favorably to cocoa, but not tea, a new
meta-analysis suggests. Authors of the study say that while both
products are rich in polyphenols, the study findings suggest that
phenols in cocoa may be more active than those in tea. The study
appears in the April 9 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine.
"Products rich in cocoa may be considered part of a blood pressure
lowering diet, provided that the total energy intake does not increase," lead
investigator for the study, Dirk Taubert, MD, PhD, from the University
Hospital of Cologne in Cologne, Germany, told heartwire. "I
believe that cocoa is healthier than other sugar confectionary or
high-fat dairy products."
Cocoa Beats Tea for BP
For their study, Taubert and colleagues conducted a literature search
for randomized parallel group or crossover studies evaluating the
effects of cocoa products or black or green tea for at least 7 days.
They identified 10 studies that met their inclusion criteria: 5 randomized
trials evaluated cocoa consumption (median, 2 weeks of cocoa consumption)
in a total of 173 subjects and 5 trials evaluated tea consumption
in a total of 343 subjects (in whom tea consumption was measured
for a median of 4 weeks). In both analyses, study participants were
evenly split between active and control groups. In the cocoa studies,
cocoa consumption was typically flavonol-rich chocolate in the range
of 100 g per day; in the tea studies, consumption was in the range
of 4 to 6 cups daily.
In the cocoa studies, systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) dropped
in the active group as compared with controls; however, in the tea
studies, no differences were seen in BP between the 2 groups. The
authors point out that while the 2 substances contain similar amounts
of polyphenols, the components of these polyphenols differ between
cocoa and tea: cocoa is particularly rich in procyanidins, whereas
black and green tea are rich in flavanols and gallic acid. It may
be that the polyphenol components in cocoa are more bioavailable,
Taubert and colleagues propose.
In the analysis, cocoa lower systolic blood pressure almost 5mm
(4.7) and lowered diastolic blood pressure by an average of nearly
3mm (2.8). Tea had no measurable effect.
According to Taubert and colleagues, the effects of cocoa on SBP
and DBP were comparable to those achieved with antihypertensive drugs. "The
magnitude of the hypotensive effects of cocoa is clinically noteworthy;
it is in the range that is usually achieved with monotherapy of β-blockers
or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors," they write. "At
the population level, a reduction of 4 to 5 millimeters of mercury
in SBP and 2 to 3 millimeters of mercury in DBP would be expected
to substantially reduce the risk of stroke (by about 20%), coronary
heart disease (by 10%), and all-cause mortality (by 8%)."
Dr. Taubert acknowledged to heartwire that studies of tea and cocoa
have yielded contradictory results. "The inconsistencies may
result from differences in research question and research focus," he
said. For example, "the reported effects of polyphenols on blood
pressure, endothelial function, or platelet aggregation may be caused
by different mechanisms and different phenols. The transient effects
observed after administration of single phenol doses may be differentiated
from the sustained effects observed after multiple daily doses. Moreover,
plant foods like cocoa or tea contain many different — 100
and more — phenol compounds, but so far, mechanistic studies
have focused on the flavonol monomers catechin and epicatechin, for
which significant bioavailability has been demonstrated. But these
may not be the active ingredients as our meta-analysis indicates."
Dr. Taubert believes his study "will not put the debate to
rest, but foster a new debate and, more important, new research in
this field."
Arch Intern Med. 2007;167:626-634.

|