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      Effect of acute ingestion of fresh and stored lettuce (Lactuca sativa) on plasma total antioxidant capacity and antioxidant levels in human subjects.

      The British Journal of Nutrition
      Adult, Analysis of Variance, Antioxidants, chemistry, metabolism, Area Under Curve, Ascorbic Acid, analysis, Biological Availability, Caffeic Acids, blood, Carotenoids, Coumaric Acids, Eating, Female, Flavonoids, Food Handling, Food Packaging, Free Radicals, Humans, Lettuce, Male, Middle Aged, Oxidation-Reduction, Phenols, Polymers, Quercetin, Time Factors

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          Abstract

          The present study investigated whether storage under modified-atmosphere packaging (MAP) affected the antioxidant properties of fresh lettuce (Lactuca sativa). Eleven healthy volunteers (six men, five women) consumed 250 g fresh lettuce, and blood was sampled before (0 h) and 2, 3 and 6 h after consumption. The protocol was repeated 3 d later with the same lettuce stored at 5 degrees C under MAP conditions (O2-N2 (5:95, v/v)). Results showed that after ingestion of fresh lettuce, plasma total radical-trapping antioxidant potential (TRAP), measured as area under the curve, was significantly higher (1.3 (sem 0.3) mmol/l per 6 h; P<0.05) than the value obtained with MAP-stored lettuce (0.1 (sem 0.2) mmol/l per 6 h). Plasma TRAP, quercetin and p-coumaric acid were significantly different from baseline values (P

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