Impact of blackberry juice on biochemical and histopathological profile in Wistar rats fed with a high-sucrose and high-colesterol diet

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Abstract

The effect of blackberry juice processed with microwaves and ultrasound on the biochemical and histopathological profile of Wistar rats fed with high-sucrose+cholesterol diet was evaluated. Rats were divided in five groups: control group (standard diet, protein 18.6%, fat 6.2%, carbohydrate 44.2%, n = 7), S group (standard diet+30% sucrose solution), S + C group (standard diet+30% sucrose solution+1 g/kg cholesterol, n = 7). S + J group (standard diet+30% sucrose solution+ 4.2 mL/kg juice, n = 7), S + C + J group (standard diet+30% sucrose solution+1 g/kg cholesterol+ 4.2 mL/kg of juice, n = 8). Non-processed blackberry juice was not tested. Supplementation with blackberry juice decreased levels of glucose in the serum (17%). Also, it reduced the abdominal and pericardial adipose tissue (P = .001) as well as liver, heart and kidney weight (p < .05). Abdominal adipose tissue and liver histology showed that the juice reduced adipocyte hypertrophy and simple steatosis. Blackberry juice processed with microwaves and ultrasound has potential as bioactive food.

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Guzmán-Gerónimo, R. I., Herrera-Sotero, M., Grijalva, B., Oliart-Ros, R. M., Meza-Alvarado, J. E., Martínez-Chacón, A. J., … Herrera-Meza, S. (2020). Impact of blackberry juice on biochemical and histopathological profile in Wistar rats fed with a high-sucrose and high-colesterol diet. CYTA - Journal of Food, 18(1), 359–366. https://doi.org/10.1080/19476337.2020.1762747

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