Czech
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Natural Product Communications 2011-Sep

Dietary burden of phenolics per serving of "Mountain tea" (Sideritis) from Macedonia and correlation to antioxidant activity.

Články mohou překládat pouze registrovaní uživatelé
Přihlášení Registrace
Odkaz je uložen do schránky
Jasmina Petreska
Marina Stefova
Federico Ferreres
Diego A Moreno
Francisco A Tomás-Barberán
Gjose Stefkov
Svetlana Kulevanova
Angel Gil-Izquierdo

Klíčová slova

Abstraktní

This work was afforded from 2 points of view, phytochemical evaluation and relation to antioxidant activity and dietary burden of phenolics of a cup of "Mountain tea", a drink obtained by domestic infusion of Sideritis. Phytochemically, two extraction protocols using water and methanol as solvent were used for comparison. Methanol and boiling water extracts (by domestic infusion procedure) showed that extracts were rich in bound forms of phenolics such as hydroxycinnamic acids, phenylethanoid glycosides and flavonoid glycosides. The total phenolic content for Sideritis species ranged around 190 mg per serving (2 g infusion bag) for methanol extracts and around 72 mg per serving in water extracts. Among the two different Macedonian Sideritis species, Sideritis raeseri (wild growing) showed the highest phenolics content in both extracts (212 mg and 89 mg per serving, respectively). Concerning the phenolic content in the different aerial parts, leaf was the richest plant organ in phenolics followed by flower and stem with the lowest amount. The methanol extract from Sideritis raeseri (wild growing) showed the highest antioxidant capacity as shown by DPPH, ABTS and FRAP assays. The antioxidant capacity was linearly correlated with phenolic content. Nutritionally, the dietary burden of phenolics of a "Mountain tea" bag for domestic infusion (serving size) was established at 89 mg for an homogeneous and equal distribution of the different aerial parts (leaf, flower and stem). However, and according to our results a rate of 60% leaf and 40% flower would increase the content of bioavailable phenolics and also the total phenolics content of a serving bag of "Mountain tea".

Připojte se k naší
facebookové stránce

Nejúplnější databáze léčivých bylin podložená vědou

  • Funguje v 55 jazycích
  • Bylinné léky podporované vědou
  • Rozpoznávání bylin podle obrázku
  • Interaktivní mapa GPS - označte byliny na místě (již brzy)
  • Přečtěte si vědecké publikace související s vaším hledáním
  • Hledejte léčivé byliny podle jejich účinků
  • Uspořádejte své zájmy a držte krok s novinkami, klinickými testy a patenty

Zadejte symptom nebo chorobu a přečtěte si o bylinách, které by vám mohly pomoci, napište bylinu a podívejte se na nemoci a příznaky, proti kterým se používá.
* Všechny informace vycházejí z publikovaného vědeckého výzkumu

Google Play badgeApp Store badge