Consumption of polyphenol plants may slow aging and associated diseases.

Curr Pharm Des

Division of Dermatology, University of Kansas School of Medicine, 3901 Rainbow Boulevard Mailstop 2025, Kansas City, KS, 66207, USA.

Published: April 2014

Slowing aging is a widely shared goal. Plant-derived polyphenols, which are found in commonly consumed food plants such as tea, cocoa, blueberry and grape, have been proposed to have many health benefits, including slowing aging. In-vivo studies have demonstrated the lifespan-extending ability of six polyphenol-containing plants. These include five widely consumed foods (tea, blueberry, cocoa, apple, pomegranate) and a flower commonly used as a folk medicine (betony). These and multiple other plant polyphenols have been shown to have beneficial effects on aging-associated changes across a variety of organisms from worm and fly to rodent and human.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1381612811319340004DOI Listing

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