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Curcumin suppresses fat tissue growth in rodent models

Published on May 18, 2009 at 3:42 PM · 3 Comments

Curcumin, the major polyphenol found in turmeric, appears to reduce weight gain in mice and suppress the growth of fat tissue in mice and cell models.

Researchers at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University (USDA HNRCA) studied mice fed high fat diets supplemented with curcumin and cell cultures incubated with curcumin.

"Weight gain is the result of the growth and expansion of fat tissue, which cannot happen unless new blood vessels form, a process known as angiogenesis." said senior author Mohsen Meydani, DVM, PhD, director of the Vascular Biology Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA. "Based on our data, curcumin appears to suppress angiogenic activity in the fat tissue of mice fed high fat diets."

Meydani continued, "It is important to note, we don't know whether these results can be replicated in humans because, to our knowledge, no studies have been done."

Turmeric is known for providing flavor to curry. One of its components is curcumin, a type of phytochemical known as a polyphenol. Research findings suggest that phytochemicals, which are the chemicals found in plants, appear to help prevent disease. As the bioactive component of turmeric, curcumin is readily absorbed for use by the body.

Meydani and colleagues studied mice fed high fat diets for 12 weeks. The high fat diet of one group was supplemented with 500 mg of curcumin/ kg diet; the other group consumed no curcumin. Both groups ate the same amount of food, indicating curcumin did not affect appetite, but mice fed the curcumin supplemented diet did not gain as much weight as mice that were not fed curcumin.

Comments
  1. Peter Losh Peter Losh United States says:

    This could be good news for anyone trying to avoid weight gain. But it also begs the question: If curcumin suppresses angiogenesis and prevents the development of new blood vessels, thus inhibiting the expansion of fat cells, does the same process inhibit the development of  new muscle tissue as well? This would in fact make curcumin a poor polyphenol for fitness -- you'd see limited gains from exercise.

  2. Yongchang Qian Yongchang Qian United States says:

    It will be greatly helpful if authors can give data on curcumin interference with weight gain in food control group fed with the purified diet(AIN-93) containing 4% fat by weight (TD.06432 Harlan Teklad).

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News-Medical.Net.



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