Epicatechin in Cocoa may help to enhance skeletal muscle function

A clinical trial led by researchers at UC San Diego School of Medicine and VA San Diego Healthcare  System (VASDHS) found that patients with advanced heart failure and type 2 diabetes showed improved  mitochondrial structure after three months of treatment with epicatechin enriched cocoa. Epicatechin  is a flavonoid found in dark chocolate. The results of this initial study has led to the  implementation of larger, placebo-controlled clinical trial at UC San Diego School of Medicine and  VASDHS to assess if patients with heart failure and diabetes show improvement in their exercise  capacity when treated with epicatechin-rich cocoa. The study published this week by the journal  Clinical and Translational Science looked at five profoundly ill patients with major damage to  skeletal muscle mitochondria. Mitochondria are structures responsible for most of the energy  produced in cells. These “fuel cells” are dysfunctional as a result of both type 2 diabetes and  heart failure, leading to abnormalities in skeletal muscle. In patients with heart failure and  diabetes abnormalities in both the heart and skeletal muscle result in impaired functional capacity.  These patients often complain of shortness of breath, lack of energy and have difficulty walking  even short distances. The trial participants consumed dark chocolate bars and a beverage with a  total epicatechin content of approximately 100 mg per day for three months. Biopsies of skeletal  muscle were conducted before and after treatment. After the three-month treatment, the researchers  looked at changes in mitochondria volume and the abundance of cristae, which are internal  compartments of mitochondria that are necessary for efficient function of the mitochondria, and  measurable by electron microscopy. “The cristae had been severely damaged and decreased in quantity  in these patients,” said one of the senior investigators, Francisco J. Villarreal, MD, PhD of UC San  Diego’s Department of Medicine’s Division of Cardiology. “After three months, we saw recovery cristae numbers back toward normal levels, and increases in several molecular indicators involved in  new mitochondria production.” The results, which mimicked earlier studies showing improvement in  skeletal and heart muscle function in animal models after treatment with epicatechin, were promising  enough to prompt the larger study. The principal investigator of this trial was Pam R. Taub, MD,  assistant professor of medicine at UC San Diego and the VA San Diego Healthcare System. Taub will be  leading the new clinical trial at UC San Diego that will enroll normal sedentary subjects as well as  patients with heart failure/diabetes who will be treated with placebo, or epicatechin-rich  chocolate.

Source : EUREKALERT

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