Research News:
High-ORAC Foods May Slow Aging
By Judy
McBride
February 8, 1999
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8--Foods that score high in an
antioxidant analysis called ORAC may protect cells and their components from
oxidative damage, according to studies of animals and human blood at the
Agricultural Research Service's Human
Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts in Boston.
ARS is the chief scientific agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture
ORAC, short for Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity, is a
test tube analysis that measures the total antioxidant power of foods and other
chemical substances.
Early findings suggest that eating plenty of high-ORAC
fruits and vegetables--such as spinach and blueberries--may help slow the
processes associated with aging in both body and brain.
"If these findings are borne out in further research,
young and middle-aged people may be able to reduce risk of diseases of
aging--including senility--simply by adding high-ORAC foods to their diets,"
said ARS Administrator Floyd P. Horn.
In the studies, eating plenty of high-ORAC foods:
- Raised the antioxidant power of human blood 10 to 25 percent
- Prevented some loss of long-term memory and learning ability in
middle-aged rats
- Maintained the ability of brain cells in middle-aged rats to respond to
a chemical stimulus--a function that normally decreases with age
- Protected rats' tiny blood vessels--capillaries--against oxygen damage
Nutritionist Ronald L. Prior contends, "If we can show
some relationship between ORAC intake and health outcome in people, I think we
may reach a point where the ORAC value will become a new standard for good
antioxidant protection." (See table at end for ORAC values of fruits and
vegetables.)
The thesis that oxidative damage culminates in many of
the maladies of aging is well accepted in the health community. The evidence has
spurred skyrocketing sales of antioxidant vitamins. But several large trials
have had mixed results.
"It may be that combinations of nutrients found in foods
have greater protective effects than each nutrient taken alone," said Guohua
(Howard) Cao, a physician and chemist who developed the ORAC assay.
He and Prior have seen the ORAC value of human blood
rise in two studies. In the first, eight women gave blood after separately
ingesting spinach, strawberries and red wine--all high-ORAC foods--or taking
1,250 milligrams of vitamin C. A large serving of fresh spinach produced the
biggest rise in the women's blood antioxidant scores--up to 25 percent--followed
by vitamin C, strawberries and lastly, red wine
In the second study, men and women had a 13- to
15-percent increase in the antioxidant power of their blood after doubling their
daily fruit and vegetable intake compared to what they consumed before the
study. Just doubling intake, without regard to ORAC scores of the fruits and
vegetables, more than doubled the number of ORAC units the volunteers consumed,
said Prior.
Early evidence for the protecting power of these diets
comes from rat studies by Prior, Cao and colleagues. Rats fed daily doses of
blueberry extract for six weeks before being subjected to two days of pure
oxygen apparently suffered much less damage to the capillaries in and around
their lungs, Prior said. The fluid that normally accumulates in the pleural
cavity surrounding the lungs was much lower compared to the group that didn't
get blueberry extract.
Neuroscientist James Joseph and psychologist Barbara
Shukitt-Hale at the center tested middle-aged rats that had eaten diets
fortified with spinach or strawberry extract or vitamin E for nine months. A
daily dose of spinach extract "prevented some loss of long-term memory and
learning ability normally experienced by the 15-month-old rats," said Shukitt-Hale.
Spinach was also the most potent in protecting different
types of nerve cells in two separate parts of the brain against the effects of
aging, said Joseph.
"These cells were significantly more responsive when the
animals ate diets fortified with high-ORAC foods--especially spinach--compared
to unfortified diets," Joseph said. "The spinach group scored twice as
responsive as the control animals."
Why spinach is more effective than strawberries--which
score higher in the ORAC assay--is still a mystery. The researchers conjecture
that it may be due to specific compounds or a specific combination of them in
the greens.
More details on this research appear in an article in
the February issue of Agricultural
Research, ARS' monthly magazine. The story is also available on the
World Wide Web at:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/feb99/aging0299.htm
Top-Scoring Fruits & Vegetables
ORAC units per 100 grams (about 3 ½ ounces) |
| Fruits
|
|
Vegetables |
|
| Prunes |
5770 |
Kale |
1770 |
| Raisins |
2830 |
Spinach |
1260 |
| Blueberries |
2400 |
Brussels sprouts
|
980 |
| Blackberries
|
2036 |
Alfalfa sprouts
|
930 |
| Strawberries
|
1540 |
Broccoli flowers
|
890 |
| Raspberries |
1220 |
Beets |
840 |
| Plums |
949 |
Red bell pepper
|
710 |
| Oranges |
750 |
Onion |
450 |
| Red grapes |
739 |
Corn |
400 |
| Cherries |
670 |
Eggplant |
390 |
| Kiwi fruit |
602 |
|
|
| Grapefruit, pink
|
483 |
|
|
Scientific contact: Ronald Prior, James Joseph,
Guohua Cao or Barbara Shukitt-Hale, Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts, Boston, Mass., phone
         (617)
557-3310,
fax (617) 556-3299 |