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Cocoa Flavanols Adjuvant to an Oral Nutritional Supplement Acutely Enhances Nutritive Flow in Skeletal Muscle Without Altering Leg Glucose Uptake Kinetics in Older Adults

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Journal Nutrients
Date 2021 Jun 2
PMID 34068170
Citations 4
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Abstract

Ageing is associated with postprandial muscle vascular and metabolic dysfunction, suggesting vascular modifying interventions may be of benefit. Reflecting this, we investigated the impact of acute cocoa flavanol (450-500 mg) intake (versus placebo control) on vascular (via ultrasound) and glucose/insulin metabolic responses (via arterialised/venous blood samples and ELISA) to an oral nutritional supplement (ONS) in twelve healthy older adults (50% male, 72 ± 4 years), in a crossover design study. The cocoa condition displayed significant increases in microvascular blood volume (MBV) in response to feeding at 180 and 240-min after ONS consumption (baseline: 1.00 vs. 180 min: 1.09 ± 0.03, = 0.05; 240 min: 1.13 ± 0.04, = 0.002), with MBV at these timepoints significantly higher than in the control condition ( < 0.05). In addition, there was a trend ( = 0.058) for MBV in to increase in response to ONS in the cocoa condition only. Leg blood flow and vascular conductance increased, and vascular resistance decreased in response to ONS ( < 0.05), but these responses were not different between conditions ( > 0.05). Similarly, glucose uptake and insulin increased in response to ONS ( < 0.05) comparably between conditions ( > 0.05). Thus, acute cocoa flavanol supplementation can potentiate oral feeding-induced increases in MBV in older adults, but this improvement does not relay to muscle glucose uptake.

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