| Berries, Beans Top 'Best Antioxidants List'
Look for color when searching for these cancer fighters, experts say
(HealthDayNews) -- A variety of veggies,
fruits and nuts battled it out this month for the top spot on
a new list of the 20 most antioxidant-rich foods, ranked by
nutrition scientists at the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA).
In the end, small red beans won the day, narrowly beating
out wild blueberries as the food with the highest
concentration of disease-fighting compounds per serving.
Antioxidants fight damage to cells from rogue molecules
called "free radicals." Experts believe this assault on cells
may fuel killer diseases such as heart disease and cancer, and
even aging itself.
The new Top 20 list, published in the June issue of the
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, "is a
relative ranking of the capacity of foods to interfere with or
prevent oxidative processes and to scavenge free radicals,"
explained list co-creator Ronald L. Prior, a USDA nutritionist
and research chemist based in Little Rock, Ark.
Prior and his colleagues used the most advanced
technologies available to tabulate antioxidant levels in more
than 100 different types of fruits, vegetables, berries, nuts
and spices.
Their Top 20:
-
Small red beans (dried)
-
Wild blueberries
-
Red kidney beans
-
Pinto beans
-
Blueberries (cultivated)
-
Cranberries
-
Artichokes (cooked)
-
Blackberries
-
Prunes
-
Raspberries
-
Strawberries
-
Red delicious apples
-
Granny Smith apples
-
Pecans
-
Sweet cherries
-
Black plums
-
Russet potatoes (cooked)
-
Black beans (dried)
-
Plums
-
Gala apples
There's "still a lot we haven't learned" about why some
foods are richer in antioxidants than others, Prior said.
Even though the small red bean came out on top, "we don't
have a lot of information on beans," he added.
Berries are better understood. "The components that
contribute a lot of the antioxidant activity are what are
called anthocyanins, the compounds that give many berries
their dark blue color," he said.
In fact, color may be key to spotting foods that fight
free radicals, said Roberta Anding, an American Dietetic
Association spokeswoman and a nutritionist at Texas
Children's Hospital in Houston.
"If you're looking for the best places to get
antioxidants, I will usually tell folks to look at the
colors of the rainbow," she added.
For example, "you'll find lutein with some of the yellow
pigments found in corn; orange can be the pigments from the
carotenoid family that are found in cantaloupe, butternut
squash and mango; red could come from things like lycopene,
found in tomatoes and watermelon. And then the darker colors
-- the purples, blues, in berries," she said.
But Prior cautioned that just because a food has proven
to be antioxidant-rich in the USDA's lab, that doesn't mean
all those nutrients will be successfully absorbed by the
human digestive tract.
"As we learn more and more, we're finding that, depending
on the chemical makeup of antioxidants in different foods,
some of them aren't apparently absorbed as well, or else
they are metabolized in a form where they are no longer
antioxidants," he said.
Whether a food is eaten fresh, frozen, processed or
cooked can also affect its antioxidant potency -- for good
or ill, he said. Blueberries are best when eaten fresh
rather than cooked in a pie, for example. On the other hand,
research has shown that gentle cooking raises the
antioxidant power of tomatoes, he noted.
Although experts are working hard on the project, ongoing
efforts to come up with daily dietary guidelines for
antioxidant consumption will be "a long process," Prior
said.
"How antioxidants behave, how they act within the body,
the dose-response -- we just don't know enough about it," he
said.
For her part, Anding said people shouldn't get too hung
up on gorging on one particular food, but "cast your net
widely," eating generous daily servings of a variety of
fruits, vegetables and other wholesome foods.
Looking over the USDA's list, Anding suggested creating
what she called an antioxidant "power salad."
First, she said, "put together a salad with a variety of
mixed greens. Then I'd throw in some dried cranberries or
blueberries from the health food store, toss in a few nuts,
with a low-fat salad. Again -- choosing from the colors of
the rainbow."
More information
Check out the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention for its Color Your Way to 5 A Day antioxidant-rich
diet plan.
By E.J. Mundell
SOURCES: Ronald L. Prior, Ph.D.,
nutritionist/research chemist, USDA Arkansas Children's
Nutrition Center, Little Rock, Ark.; Roberta Anding, MS,
RD/LD, CDE, nutritionist, Texas Children's Hospital,
Houston; June 2004 Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry
Last Updated: April 28, 2005
Copyright © 2004 ScoutNews LLC. All rights reserved.
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