Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology
Online ISSN : 1881-7742
Print ISSN : 0301-4800
ISSN-L : 0301-4800
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Bioavailability of Acetate from Two Vinegar Supplements: Capsule and Drink
Shino SUGIYAMATakashi FUSHIMIMikiya KISHIShin IRIEShigeki TSUJINatsuko HOSOKAWATakayuki KAGA
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2010 Volume 56 Issue 4 Pages 266-269

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Abstract

The bioavailability of acetate in various vinegar supplements, e.g. as capsules and drinks, remains unclear. Thus, we conducted a cross-over clinical study in 30 healthy subjects. After an overnight fast, subjects received each test sample in a randomised sequence: 9 vinegar capsules (containing 750 mg acetic acid in total) with 150 mL of water, 100 mL of vinegar drink (containing 750 mg acetic acid), and 150 mL of water as reference. Blood samples were collected before (defined as 0 min), at 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120 and 180 min after each test sample intake. In the vinegar drink group, serum acetate concentration increased immediately after intake, peaked at 15 min and returned to baseline at 90 min. That in the vinegar capsule group rose slowly, peaked at 30 min and returned to baseline at 120 min. The peak values in both groups exceeded 200 μmol/L, the physiologically active concentration confirmed by in vitro experiment. In the reference group, levels remained constant throughout the 180-min period. The amount of absorbed acetate from the vinegar capsule group and the drink group was evaluated by the difference value of the area under the serum acetate concentration-time curve (AUC) between in each vinegar group and in the reference group (expressed as AUCcapsule-ref and AUCdrink-ref , respectively). AUCcapsule-ref was about 80% of AUCdrink-ref , but there was no significant difference between them.

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© 2010 by the Center for Academic Publications Japan
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