Olives and Bone: A Green Osteoporosis Prevention Option
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Bone Protecting Effects of Olives
3. Bone Protecting Effects of Olive Oil
4. Bone-Protecting Effects of Olive Polyphenols
5. Studies of Olive Polyphenols on Bone Cells Using in Vitro Models
6. Human Studies on the Bone Protecting Effects of Olive Oil
7. Future Research Directions
8. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Reference | Treatment; Dose; Length | Method of Inducing Bone Loss | Bone Mineral Density | Histology/ Histomorphometry | Bone Turnover Marker | Bone Strength | Oxidative Stress | Inflammation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Puel et al. 2007 [26] | Black Lucques olives; 6 g per day; 84 days | OVX or OVX + talc | ↑ (diaphyseal) | NA | ↔ | ↔ | ↔ | ↔ |
2 | Puel et al. 2004 [27] | Extra virgin olive oil; 50 g/kg diet; 80 days. Oleuropein; 0.15 g/kg diet; 80 days | OVX or OVX + talc | ↑ | NA | ↔ | ↑ | ↔ | ↓ (olive oil only) |
3 | Saleh and Saleh 2011 [28] | Olive oil; 1 mL/100 g diet; 12 weeks | OVX | ↑ bone thickness | NA | ↓ calcim and ALP activity | NA | ↓ | NA |
4 | Liu et al. 2014 [29] | Olive oil; 1 mL/100 g diet; 12 weeks | OVX | ↑ | NA | ↔ | NA | ↓ | NA |
5 | Puel et al. 2006 [32] | Oleuropein; 2.5–15 mg/kg; 100 days | OVX or OVX + talc | ↑ | NA | ↓ formation & resorption markers | ↔ | ↔ | NA |
6 | Puel et al. 2008 [31] | Tyrosol 0.017%, or hydroxytyrosol 0.017%, or olive mill wastewater 0.17%, or olive mill wastewater extract 0.08% or 0.0425%; 84 days. | OVX or OVX + talc | ↑ (all except OMWW) | NA | ↑ osteocalcin; ↔ DPD | ↔ | ↓ isoprostane; ↔ FRAP | ↓ granulocytes (OMWW 0.0425%); ↔ fibrinogen |
7 | Hagiwara et al. 2011 [33] | Hydroxytyrosol or tyrosol or oleuropein; 10 mg/kg; 28 days | OVX | ↑ trabecular; ↔ cortical | NA | NA | NA | NA | NA |
8 | Keiler et al. 2014 [34] | Olive oil phenolic extract; 800 mg/kg diet; 12 weeks | OVX | NA | ↔ | NA | NA | NA | NA |
No. | Reference | Subjects and Treatment | Bone Mineral Density | Bone Turnover Markers | Antioxidants |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Fernandez-Real et al. 2012 [21] | 127 community-dwelling men aged 55–80 years participated in the Prevencion con Dieta Mediterranea (PREDIMED) study with high cardivascular risk. They were divided into 3 groups: Mediterranean diet with virgin olive oil, Mediterranean diet with mixed nuts, low-fat diet. 2 years follow up. | NA | ↑ | NA |
2 | Liu et al. 2014 [29] | Patients aged 30–50 years who had undergone a hysterectomy. 10 took 50 mL olive oil daily and 10 took nothing. Follow up 1 year. | ↑ | ↑ | NA |
3 | Mazzanti et al. 2015 [15] | 60 Caucasian post-menopausal women aged 50–61 years attending health screening for osteoporosis in a hospital. They were randomly divided into two groups, 1 taking enriched extra virgin olive oil (vitamin K1 0.07 mg/100 mL, vitamin D3 50 µg/100 mL and vitamin B6 6.0 mg/100 mL) and another taking plain virgin olive oil for 1 year. | NA | ↑ | ↑ |
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Chin, K.-Y.; Ima-Nirwana, S. Olives and Bone: A Green Osteoporosis Prevention Option. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2016, 13, 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13080755
Chin K-Y, Ima-Nirwana S. Olives and Bone: A Green Osteoporosis Prevention Option. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2016; 13(8):755. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13080755
Chicago/Turabian StyleChin, Kok-Yong, and Soelaiman Ima-Nirwana. 2016. "Olives and Bone: A Green Osteoporosis Prevention Option" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13, no. 8: 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13080755
APA StyleChin, K. -Y., & Ima-Nirwana, S. (2016). Olives and Bone: A Green Osteoporosis Prevention Option. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 13(8), 755. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13080755