Issues Surrounding Health Claims for Barley

Government-approved health claims support dietary intervention as a safe and practical approach to improving consumer health and provide industry with regulatory guidelines for food product labels. Claims already allowed in the United States, United Kingdom, Sweden, and The Netherlands for reducing...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of nutrition 2008-06, Vol.138 (6), p.1237S-1243S
Hauptverfasser: Ames, Nancy P, Rhymer, Camille R
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container_title The Journal of nutrition
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creator Ames, Nancy P
Rhymer, Camille R
description Government-approved health claims support dietary intervention as a safe and practical approach to improving consumer health and provide industry with regulatory guidelines for food product labels. Claims already allowed in the United States, United Kingdom, Sweden, and The Netherlands for reducing cholesterol through consumption of oat or barley soluble fiber provide a basis for review, but each country may have different criteria for assessing clinical evidence for a physiological effect. For example, the FDA-approved barley health claim was based on a petition that included 39 animal model studies and 11 human clinical trials. Since then, more studies have been published, but with few exceptions, clinical data continue to demonstrate that the consumption of barley products is effective for lowering total and LDL cholesterol. More research is needed to fully understand the mechanism of cholesterol reduction and the role of β-glucan molecular weight, viscosity, and solubility. In an assessment of the physiological efficacy of a dietary intervention, consideration should also be given to the potential impact of physical and thermal food-processing treatments and genotypic variation in the barley source. New barley cultivars have been generated specifically for food use, possessing increased β-glucan, desirable starch composition profiles, and improved milling/processing traits. These advances in barley production, coupled with the establishment of a government-regulated health claim for barley β-glucan, will stimulate new processing opportunities for barley foods and provide consumers with reliable, healthy food choices.
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subjects animal models
barley
beta-glucans
beta-Glucans - chemistry
blood lipids
cholesterol
clinical trials
Clinical Trials as Topic
Coronary Disease - prevention & control
dietary fiber
Dietary Fiber - pharmacology
Food Labeling
food processing
Food, Organic - standards
functional foods
health claims
Hordeum - chemistry
human health
human nutrition
Humans
medicinal properties
Netherlands
Sweden
United Kingdom
United States
title Issues Surrounding Health Claims for Barley
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