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Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases

This paper reports the content in macronutrients, free sugars, polyphenols, and inorganic ions, known to exert any positive or negative action on microbial oral disease such as caries and gingivitis, of seven food/beverages (red chicory, mushroom, raspberry, green and black tea, cranberry juice, dar...

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Autores principales: Daglia, Maria, Papetti, Adele, Mascherpa, Dora, Grisoli, Pietro, Giusto, Giovanni, Lingström, Peter, Pratten, Jonathan, Signoretto, Caterina, Spratt, David A., Wilson, Michael, Zaura, Egija, Gazzani, Gabriella
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22013381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/274578
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author Daglia, Maria
Papetti, Adele
Mascherpa, Dora
Grisoli, Pietro
Giusto, Giovanni
Lingström, Peter
Pratten, Jonathan
Signoretto, Caterina
Spratt, David A.
Wilson, Michael
Zaura, Egija
Gazzani, Gabriella
author_facet Daglia, Maria
Papetti, Adele
Mascherpa, Dora
Grisoli, Pietro
Giusto, Giovanni
Lingström, Peter
Pratten, Jonathan
Signoretto, Caterina
Spratt, David A.
Wilson, Michael
Zaura, Egija
Gazzani, Gabriella
author_sort Daglia, Maria
collection PubMed
description This paper reports the content in macronutrients, free sugars, polyphenols, and inorganic ions, known to exert any positive or negative action on microbial oral disease such as caries and gingivitis, of seven food/beverages (red chicory, mushroom, raspberry, green and black tea, cranberry juice, dark beer). Tea leaves resulted the richest material in all the detected ions, anyway tea beverages resulted the richest just in fluoride. The highest content in zinc was in chicory, raspberry and mushroom. Raspberry is the richest food in strontium and boron, beer in selenium, raspberry and mushroom in copper. Beer, cranberry juice and, especially green and black tea are very rich in polyphenols, confirming these beverages as important sources of such healthy substances. The fractionation, carried out on the basis of the molecular mass (MM), of the water soluble components occurring in raspberry, chicory, and mushroom extracts (which in microbiological assays revealed the highest potential action against oral pathogens), showed that both the high and low MM fractions are active, with the low MM fractions displaying the highest potential action for all the fractionated extracts. Our findings show that more compounds that can play a different active role occur in these foods.
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spelling pubmed-31962652011-10-19 Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases Daglia, Maria Papetti, Adele Mascherpa, Dora Grisoli, Pietro Giusto, Giovanni Lingström, Peter Pratten, Jonathan Signoretto, Caterina Spratt, David A. Wilson, Michael Zaura, Egija Gazzani, Gabriella J Biomed Biotechnol Research Article This paper reports the content in macronutrients, free sugars, polyphenols, and inorganic ions, known to exert any positive or negative action on microbial oral disease such as caries and gingivitis, of seven food/beverages (red chicory, mushroom, raspberry, green and black tea, cranberry juice, dark beer). Tea leaves resulted the richest material in all the detected ions, anyway tea beverages resulted the richest just in fluoride. The highest content in zinc was in chicory, raspberry and mushroom. Raspberry is the richest food in strontium and boron, beer in selenium, raspberry and mushroom in copper. Beer, cranberry juice and, especially green and black tea are very rich in polyphenols, confirming these beverages as important sources of such healthy substances. The fractionation, carried out on the basis of the molecular mass (MM), of the water soluble components occurring in raspberry, chicory, and mushroom extracts (which in microbiological assays revealed the highest potential action against oral pathogens), showed that both the high and low MM fractions are active, with the low MM fractions displaying the highest potential action for all the fractionated extracts. Our findings show that more compounds that can play a different active role occur in these foods. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2011 2011-10-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3196265/ /pubmed/22013381 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/274578 Text en Copyright © 2011 Maria Daglia et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Daglia, Maria
Papetti, Adele
Mascherpa, Dora
Grisoli, Pietro
Giusto, Giovanni
Lingström, Peter
Pratten, Jonathan
Signoretto, Caterina
Spratt, David A.
Wilson, Michael
Zaura, Egija
Gazzani, Gabriella
Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title_full Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title_fullStr Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title_full_unstemmed Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title_short Plant and Fungal Food Components with Potential Activity on the Development of Microbial Oral Diseases
title_sort plant and fungal food components with potential activity on the development of microbial oral diseases
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196265/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22013381
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/274578
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