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Milk and absorption of dietary flavanols - Nature

  • ️Keen, Carl L.
  • ️Thu Dec 18 2003
  • Brief Communication
  • Published: 18 December 2003

Nutrition

Nature volume 426pages 787–788 (2003)Cite this article

Abstract

Flavanol compounds in wine, cocoa products and tea can exert a cardioprotective effect, for example by influencing endothelial-cell function1, antithrombic mechanisms2 and blood pressure3,4. Serafini et al.5 claim that consuming dark chocolate, but not milk chocolate or dark chocolate together with milk, increases the antioxidant capacity of human plasma, and suggest that interaction between milk proteins and chocolate flavonoids inhibits the in vivo antioxidant activity of chocolate and the absorption of epicatechin into the bloodstream. This inference could have implications beyond chocolate consumption if dairy products do indeed counteract the putative health benefits of dietary flavanols.

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Author information

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, 95616, California, USA

    Hagen Schroeter, Roberta R. Holt, Timothy J. Orozco & Carl L. Keen

  2. Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis, 95616, California, USA

    Carl L. Keen

  3. Analytical and Applied Sciences, Masterfoods USA, Hackettstown, 07840, New Jersey, USA

    Harold H. Schmitz

Authors

  1. Hagen Schroeter

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  2. Roberta R. Holt

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  3. Timothy J. Orozco

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  4. Harold H. Schmitz

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  5. Carl L. Keen

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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Carl L. Keen.

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Competing interests

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Cite this article

Schroeter, H., Holt, R., Orozco, T. et al. Milk and absorption of dietary flavanols. Nature 426, 787–788 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1038/426787b

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  • Issue Date: 18 December 2003

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/426787b

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