Synopses & Reviews
A collection of current knowledge of phytochemicals and healthInterest in phenolic phytochemicals has increased as scientific studies indicate these compounds exhibit potential health benefits. With contributions from world leaders in this research area, Plant Phenolics and Human Health: Biochemistry, Nutrition, and Pharmacology offers an essential survey of the current knowledge on the capacity of specific micronutrients present in ordinary diets to fight disease.
The coverage in this resource:
Explains the presence and biochemical properties of phenolics present in fruits and vegetables, as well as in foods derived from their plant sources
Provides biochemical explanations on how certain plant phenolics fight cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases, cancer, and other widespread pathologies
Focuses on certain phenolics, e.g., flavonoids, stilbenes, and curcuminoids, and provides insights on the biochemical bases used to define their significance in the diet as well as their recommended consumption requirements and toxicity
Appropriate for graduate and upper-level undergraduate courses in human and animal nutrition, basic nutritional biology, physiology, pharmacology, and other health-related disciplines, Plant Phenolics and Human Health: Biochemistry, Nutrition, and Pharmacology serves as both an invaluable supplementary classroom text and a self-teaching guide for professionals interested in defining the association between diet and health from classical, alternative, and complementary biomedical perspectives.
Review
"Some 62 eminent researchers from 14 countries have contributed to the book's 21 chapters, each offering a comprehensive account of what is currently happening at the cutting edge of such intersecting disciplines as food science, nutrition, medicine, and pharmaceutical research. Learned updates to this topic of plant phenolics will probably be forthcoming every five to ten years." (CHOICE, 2010)
Synopsis
With contributions from world-leaders in the research of phytochemicals and human health, this book provides the reader with a review of the current and most promising research with a focus on explaining the role specific food micronutrients have in fighting diseases. Focusing on phenolic micronutrients such as flavanoids, the editor and contributors provide the most recent research into those foods that are known to have a positive effect on diseases such as cardiovascular, cancer, neurodegenerative, and inflammatory. With an objective of tying in the specific food (fruit, vegetable) with it’s related active micronutrient(s) and their biochemical action in the human body, this book is appropriate as a supplementary text for upper level undergraduate and graduate courses in Animal and Health Nutrition and Free Radical Biology, as well as a self-teaching guide for those professionals in nutrition, medicine, physiology, and biomedical fields.
Synopsis
With contributions from world-leaders in the research of phytochemicals and human health, this book reviews the latest research on how food micronutrients fight diseases. Focusing on phenolic micronutrients such as flavanoids, the contributors examine foods with a known positive effect on cardiovascular, cancer, neurodegenerative, and inflammatory diseases. By linking foods with micronutrient(s) and their biochemical action in the human body, this book offers both a useful text for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses in nutrition and free radical biology, and a guide for professionals in nutrition, medicine, physiology, and biomedical fields.
About the Author
Cesar G. Fraga is Professor of Physical Chemistry at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and is associated with the Department of Nutrition at the University of California at Davis. Dr. Fraga is the recipient of numerous awards, has served as guest editor of periodical publications, and has taken leadership roles in different scientific societies. He has an extensive record of publications on the biochemical and physiological effects of phenolic compounds and their potential effects on human health.
Table of Contents
PREFACE.
CONTRIBUTORS.
1 Dietary Flavonoids and Phenolic Compounds (Indu B. Jaganath and Alan Crozier).
2 Bioavailability of Flavanols and Phenolic Acids (Laure Poquet, Michael N Clifford, and Gary Williamson).
3 Biochemical Actions of Plant Phenolics Compounds: Thermodynamic and Kinetic Aspects (Cesar G. Fraga, Gulcin Sagdicoglu Celep, and Monica Galleano).
4 Flavonoids–Membrane Interactions: Consequences for Biological Actions (Sandra V. Verstraeten, Cesar G. Fraga, and Patricia I. Oteiza).
5 The Biochemistry Behind the Potential Cardiovascular Protection by Dietary Flavonoids (Wai Mun Loke, Jonathan M. Hodgson, and Kevin D. Croft).
6 Dietary Flavanols: Biochemical Basis of Short-Term and Longer-Term Vascular Responses (Tankred Schewe, Yvonne Steffen, Elisabeth Kravets and Helmut Sies).
7 Green Tea Catechins: Anticancer Effects and Molecular Targets (Naghma Khan and Hasan Mukhtar).
8 Flavonols: Metabolism, Bioavailability, and Health Impacts (Junji Terao).
9 Flavonols: Biochemistry Behind Cardiovascular Effects (Francisco Pérez-Vizcaı´no and Juan Duarte).
10 Metabolism, Bioavailability, and Analysis of Dietary Isoflavones (Adrian A. Franke, Brunhild M. Halm, Kerry Kakazu and Xingnan Li).
11 Phytoestrogens Up-regulate Antioxidant Genes (Consuelo Borrás and Jose Viña).
12 Dietary Isoflavones: Cardiovascular Actions and Activation of Cellular Signalling Pathways (Richard C. M. Siow and Giovanni E. Mann).
13 Bioavailability and Metabolism of Resveratrol (Cristina Andres-Lacueva, Mireia Urpi-Sarda, Raul Zamora-Ros, and Rosa M. Lamuela-Raventos).
14 Resveratrol: Biochemistry and Functions (Samarjit Das, Hannah R. Vasanthi, and Dipak K. Das).
15 Resveratrol: The Biochemistry Behind its Anticancer Effects (Joydeb K. Kundu and Young-Joon Surh).
16 Curcumin: The Biochemistry Behind Its Anticancer Effects (Preetha Anand, Ajaikumar B. Kunnumakkara, and Bharat B. Aggarwal).
17 Plant Phenolic Compounds: Modulation of Cytoprotective Enzymes and Nrf2/ARE Signaling (Siwang Yu, Ka Lung Cheung, Wenge Li and Ah-Ng Kong).
18 Phenolics in Aging and Neurodegenerative Disorders (Vittorio Calabrese, Marzia Perluigi, Carolin Cornelius, Raffaella Coccia, Fabio Di Domenico, Giovanni Pennisi, Chiara Cini and Albena T. Dinkova-Kostova).
19 Natural Phenolics and Metal Metabolism in Neurodegenerative Diseases (Baolu Zhao).
20 Epidemiology behind Fruit and Vegetable Consumption and Cancer Risk with Focus on Flavonoids (Marta Rossi, Eva Negri, Cristina Bosetti, Claudio Pelucchi, and Carlo La Vecchia).
21 Phenylpropanoid Metabolism in Plants: Biochemistry, Functional Biology, and Metabolic Engineering (Alberto B. Landolino and Douglas R. Cook).
INDEX.