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Digestive stimulant action of spices: a myth or reality?
333
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
NutritionBile SecretionGastronomyGastrointestinal PharmacologyDigestive Stimulant ActionPhysiologyMedicineGastroenterologyFood DigestionSpice TradeFat DigestionDigestive TractMetabolomicsMetabolismPharmacologyDietary FibreFood Transit Time
Spices have long been recognized for their digestive stimulant action and are used in traditional medicine, but recent animal studies have begun to authenticate this benefit. This review aims to summarize how spices affect digestive secretions and enzymes. The authors review animal studies examining spices’ effects on bile secretion and digestive enzyme activity. Animal studies show that spices increase bile acid secretion, stimulate pancreatic and intestinal digestive enzymes, and accelerate gastrointestinal transit.
Spices have long been recognized for their digestive stimulant action. Several spices are also employed in medicinal preparations against digestive disorders in traditional and Indian systems of medicine. Earlier reports on the digestive stimulant action of spices are largely empirical; only in recent years, this beneficial attribute of spices has been authenticated in exhaustive animal studies. Animal studies have shown that many spices induce higher secretion of bile acids which play a vital role in fat digestion and absorption. When consumed through the diet also spices produce significant stimulation of the activities of pancreatic lipase, amylase and proteases. A few of them also have been shown to have beneficial effect on the terminal digestive enzymes of small intestinal mucosa. Concomitant with such a stimulation of either bile secretion or activity of digestive enzymes by these spices, leading to an accelerated digestion, a reduction in the food transit time in the gastrointestinal tract has also been shown. Thus, the digestive stimulant action of spices seems to be mediated through two possible modes: (i) by stimulating the liver to secrete bile rich in bile acids, components that are vital for fat digestion and absorption, and (ii) by a stimulation of enzyme activities that are responsible for digestion. This review highlights the available information on the influence of spices on the digestive secretions and enzymes.
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