
June 19th 2006
PLANTS
HELP FIGHT CARDIOVASCULAR DISORDERS
Indena
approach to dietary antioxidant treatment can contribute
to optimise nutrition
Rome, June 19th 2006 - Medicinal
plants can be a real boon for human health.
They can make a substantial contribution to
reducing the incidence of chronic degenerative
pathologies, including cardiovascular diseases and cancer.
On the occasion of the XIV International Symposium on
Atherosclerosis in Rome, Paolo Morazzoni, President of the Scientific Board of Indena, is to
give a Master Lecture on how standardised extracts of
edible plants can be used to optimise nutrition.
The
plants most widely used to combat cardiovascular and
dysmetabolic disorders are those containing high amounts
of polyphenols,
antioxidant molecules which have proved to be active in
counteracting radical scavenging-related diseases. This
group of plants includes Vitis
vinifera L. (grape seed), Vaccinium
myrtillus L. (bilberry), Camellia
sinensis L. (green tea) and Olea
europaea L. (olive).
Other
edible plants however have recently attracted the
attention of researchers: their biologically active
ingredients have been generally identified as proteins
which, with various mechanisms, can help also provide
relief in dysmetabolic disorders: Phaseoulus
vulgaris L. (the well known bean), Lupinus
albus L. (lupin), Glycine
max L. (soy).
In
this perspective, "standardised products obtained from well known plants such as tea,
grape, bilberry and olive tree - said Paolo Morazzoni
– help maintain
healthy physiological functions and reduce the risk of
some of the major pathologies, of which cardiovascular and
dysmetabolic disorders represent an increasing part."
Indena's
technological expertise in both production and analytical
techniques have enabled the development of edible plant
extracts, with an extremely high degree of
standardisation, which, in some cases, includes the
identification and quantification of each single component
of the complex mixture.
"In
order to obtain biological data which can be safely and
effectively reproduced
- continued Dr Morazzoni - the
botanical extract must contain the same active ingredients
over time: it should also be stable and devoid of
unpredictable toxicity and any side effects."
Indena
is committed to guaranteeing quality in this field,
through rigorous standardisation,
based on Good Agricultural Practices (GAP)
and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP),
together with analytical quantitative techniques (HPLC, HPLC-MS) and
semi-quantitative techniques (NMR,
FT-IR and NIR spectroscopy).
These enable the industrial preparation of highly
reproducible extracts of plants, which are often endowed
with exciting biological properties.
Press Contacts
Cohn & Wolfe Milan
Laura Faravelli laura_faravelli@cohnwolfe.com
Lorenzo Petracco lorenzo_petracco@cohnwolfe.com
Tel.+39 02 202391