4.0 Article

Effect of dietary chia supplementation on glucose metabolism and adipose tissue function markers in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease subjects

Journal

NUTRICION HOSPITALARIA
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 1280-1288

Publisher

ARAN EDICIONES, S L
DOI: 10.20960/nh.04084

Keywords

Dysfunctional adipose tissue; Diabetes; Chia; Ectopic fat depots; Cardiometabolic risk

Funding

  1. Mexican National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT)
  2. [SALUD-2016-01-272502]
  3. [16-980]

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This study aims to analyze the effect of chia seed supplementation on glucose metabolism, adipose tissue inflammation, and endothelial function in patients with NAFLD and early stages of diabetes. The results showed that a chia-supplemented diet can promote a healthier adipose tissue and improve pancreatic beta-cell and endothelial function.
Background: adipose tissue dysfunction is a key factor for diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) development. Chia (Salvia hispanica) is an abundant source of omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, and fiber which could improve adipose tissue functionality.Aim: to analyze the effect of an isocaloric chia-supplemented diet on glucose metabolism, adipose tissue inflammation, and endothelial function markers in patients with NAFLD and early stages of diabetes.Methods: in 32 patients with previous NAFLD diagnosis, without known diabetes, the effect of a diet supplemented with ground chia (25 g/ day/8 weeks) was evaluated. Visceral (VAF) and liver fat, plasma lipids, fatty acids, and cytokine profiles, oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), insulinogenic index (IGI30), insulin disposition index (DIO), and endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) were analyzed. Before and after eight weeks of diet supplementation.Results: chia supplementation promoted increases in plasma alpha-linolenic acid (75 %) and fiber consumption (55 %), and a higher number of EPC (+126 %). Basal OGTT showed that nine patients had normal OGTT, 17 pre-diabetes, and six newly diagnosed diabetes. In patients with diabetes, chia favored a healthier adipose tissue (VAF-7 %, NAFLD-100 %, adiponectin +47 %, resistin-30 %, IL-6-44 %, IL-1 beta-22 %) and upturn glucose metabolism through the improvement of beta-cell function (IGI30 +50 %, DIO +66 %).Conclusions: dietary supplementation with 25 g/day of ground chia may promote a healthier adipose tissue and improve pancreatic beta-cell and endothelial function. Among patients with early metabolic abnormalities, phytochemical properties of chia may retard diabetes progression and advanced stages of liver damage.

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