A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Research Shows Pears Could Be Part of a Healthy Diet to Manage Diabetes


Newswise — While the phrase “an apple a day” is a popular saying, a new
study suggests that pears as part of a healthy diet could play a role in
helping to manage type 2 diabetes and diabetes-induced hypertension.
The results of research published in Food Research International show
potential health benefits of Bartlett and Starkrimson pears. Building
on their previous studies, the research team from North Dakota State
University, Fargo, and the University of Massachusetts studied whether
the peel, pulp and juice of pears could impact the prevention and
management of type 2 diabetes, hypertension and the bacteria Helicobacter pylori, which plays a role in intestinal ulcers.
The research team includes: Kalidas Shetty and Dipayan Sarkar, now at
North Dakota State University, Fargo, previously at the University of
Massachusetts with co-authors Chandrakant Ankolekar and Marcia Pinto. Shetty, professor of Plant Sciences at
NDSU, serves as the director of the Global Institute of Food Security
and International Agriculture (GIFSIA), as well as associate vice
president for International Partnerships and Collaborations.
The in vitro (test tube) lab experiments by researchers in the study
provided metabolic insights into how two varieties of pears could play a
role to better manage early stage diabetes and associated hypertension,
commonly called high blood pressure. More research would be needed to
determine if the results of the in vitro studies can be replicated in
humans.
Naturally occurring phenolic compounds found in fruits may provide a
variety of health benefits, as this study shows. More varied and higher
phenolic content is found in the skin of the pear than in its flesh or
pulp. The study showed that Starkrimson peel had the highest total
phenolic content, and that peel extracts had significantly higher total
phenolic content than pulp. The pulp extracts of the Bartlett cultivar
had higher total phenolics when compared with Starkrimson.
“Our results from in vitro assays suggest that if we consume Bartlett
and Starkrimson pears as a whole fruit (peel and pulp) it may
potentially provide better control of early stage diabetes as part of an
overall healthier diet,” said Shetty.
“Such dietary strategy involving fruits, including pears, not only
potentially could help better control blood glucose levels, but also
reduce over dependence on drugs for prediabetes stages, or complement a
reduced pharmacological dose of drugs with side effects to combat very
early stages of type 2 diabetes,” said the study authors in their
article.
World Health Organization statistics show
that diabetes affects approximately 387 million adults worldwide, with
the number expected to jump to 592 million by 2035. Some references
consider type 2 diabetes a rapidly emergingepidemic in children due to unhealthy diets.
Effects on blood pressure
Researchers also examined whether the pears studied might provide benefits to controlling high blood pressure. ACE (angiotensin-I-converting enzyme) inhibitors are medications that are sometimes used to help treat elevated blood pressure. The study showed that the watery extract of Bartlett pulp had low to moderate ACE inhibitory activity. The pear peel and pulp did not show any ACE inhibitory activity in this study.
“Our results suggested that Bartlett pulp could be utilized as a
potential mild ACE inhibitor following further evaluation with different
concentrations and extraction processes,” said the study authors.
Pears and gut bacteria
Researchers also studied whether fermented whole pear juice of Bartlett and Starkrimson pear extracts could inhibit the bacteria H. pylori. This bacteria found in the gut often is associated with gastritis and stomach ulcers. No pH adjusted samples after fermentation inhibited H. pylori.
Starkrimson pear without pH adjustment inhibited H. pyloriafter 24, 48 and 72 hours of fermentation. Fermented samples of Bartlett pear inhibited H. pylori only after 48 and 72 hours, when pH was adjusted before fermentation.
Results suggest that fermented pear extract can inhibit H. pylori without
affecting the growth or function of probiotic bacteria and has the
potential to sustain probiotic function of beneficial bacteria.
More studies are needed, said Shetty, to further investigate the
bioactive compounds in the peel and pulp of these pear varieties. Study
of other properties such as fiber content, amino acids, and vitamin C
could provide additional insight on the role of pears in a healthy food
system.
Results show opportunity for agriculture
Shetty said results of this study and others point to the use of foods that can help combat disease, which in turn, can impact agriculture around the world. “This research helps make the case to build better ‘food crops for health,’” he said. He sees additional opportunity for agriculture, particularly in North Dakota. “We now can develop a wide diversity of crops in North Dakota that not only meet global food security and nutritional security, but also are wholesome to counter chronic diseases from poor diets,” he said. More information will be available at a Food for Health conference to be held in Fargo on July 5-8.
Currently, NDSU students in Shetty’s research group are working not only
on pear research, but also on a range of crops grown in North Dakota,
including beans, squash, and cereal grains.
Results of this study suggest that eating Bartlett and Starkrimson pears as whole, fresh harvested fruits can provide higher health benefits, due to their phenolic-linked high antioxidant activities.
Results of this study suggest that eating Bartlett and Starkrimson pears as whole, fresh harvested fruits can provide higher health benefits, due to their phenolic-linked high antioxidant activities.
So when you reach for that apple a day, maybe grab a pear too. Just remember to eat the peel.
Additional Information
Funding for early work on the study was provided by USA Pears, with support for studies on probiotic and antimicrobial benefits supported by the University of Massachusetts, Massachusetts Agricultural Experiment Station and by student Marcia Pinto on a Brazilian government scholarship. Research on health benefits is continuing at North Dakota State University since 2013, with support from the North Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station.
NDSU,
Fargo, North Dakota, USA, is notably listed among the top 108 U.S.
public and private universities in the Carnegie Commission on Higher
Education’s category of “Research Universities/Very High Research
Activity.” NDSU is listed in the Top 100 research universities in the
U.S. for R&D in agricultural sciences, chemistry, computer sciences,
physical sciences, psychology, and social sciences, based on research
expenditures reported to the National Science Foundation. As a
student-focused, land-grant, research university, we serve our citizens.www.ndsu.edu/research

