Benefits of the ipowder® extraction process applied to: Melissa officinalis L.: Improvement of antioxidant activity and in vitro gastro-intestinal release profile of rosmarinic acid

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Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate the benefits of a new extraction process, the ipowder® technology, applied to Melissa officinalis L. Compared to M. officinalis ground dry leaves, the ipowder® had a similar phytochemical fingerprint but contained twice the concentration of rosmarinic acid (by HPTLC and HPLC) and had a two-fold greater antioxidant activity (DPPH∗ method). In vitro digestion experiments (TIM-1 model) showed better availability of rosmarinic acid for intestinal absorption with the ipowder® than with ground dry leaves, manifested by a three-fold reduction in the quantity of ingested product needed for delivery of the same amount of rosmarinic acid into the upper gastro-intestinal tract. This study shows that the ipowder® technology preserves all the original plant compounds intact while making some active ingredients more accessible and available to exert their effects. To obtain a given effect, the amount of ipowder® extract to ingest will therefore be lower; a reduction in the daily dosage will be more convenient for the patient and will improve patient compliance with supplementation.

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Bardot, V., Escalon, A., Ripoche, I., Denis, S., Alric, M., Chalancon, S., … Dubourdeaux, M. (2020). Benefits of the ipowder® extraction process applied to: Melissa officinalis L.: Improvement of antioxidant activity and in vitro gastro-intestinal release profile of rosmarinic acid. In Food and Function (Vol. 11, pp. 722–729). Royal Society of Chemistry. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9fo01144g

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