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research, which features in the Journal
of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, finds that having a
cocoa drink every day for 6 weeks helps combat fatigue in people living with
multiple sclerosis.
Cocoa drinks are high in flavonoids,
which may relieve fatigue in people living with MS.
Multiple sclerosis (MS)
is an autoimmune disorder that affects about 400,000 people
in the United States and approximately 2.5 million people worldwide.
MS
affects the central nervous system.
Symptoms often include muscle weakness, burning sensations, numbness, chronic
pain, poor balance and coordination, fatigue,
and difficulty concentrating.
In
fact, as many as 9 out of 10 people with MS have fatigue, and the symptom
is usually difficult to treat. Older research has suggested that a daily dose of 45 grams of
dark chocolate may improve chronic fatigue syndrome.
Dark chocolate contains 70–85 percent cocoa.
Based
on these previous findings, Shelly Coe, who works in the Department of Sport,
Health Sciences and Social Work at the Oxford Brookes Centre for Nutrition and
Health in the United Kingdom, and a team of scientists set out to examine whether cocoa would have the same beneficial
effects on fatigue in people with MS.
Studying the effect of flavonoids
Cocoa
contains flavonoids, which are plant compounds that occur naturally in
fruits, vegetables, wine, and tea. Multiple studies have suggested that
flavonoids have anti-inflammatory, "antidiabetic, anticancer, and
neuroprotective" benefits.
In
the present study, Coe and colleagues randomly divided 40 adults with
relapsing-remitting MS and fatigue into two groups. The first group received a
cup of a flavonoid-rich drink consisting of rice milk and cocoa powder, while
the other group drank a low-flavonoid version of this beverage.
Each
group consumed their beverage on a daily basis for 6 weeks. The researchers
assessed the participants' fatigue as well as their "fatigability" —
that is, how long a person can maintain cognitive and physical performance
before fatigue sets in — at baseline, in the middle of the study period, and at
the end.
This
evaluation included subjective self-assessment and the use of a pedometer to
monitor the participants' walking speed. The researchers carried out these
assessments at three different points during the day.
A safe and easy way to relieve MS symptoms
The
study found that drinking the high-flavonoid cocoa beverage had a "small
effect on fatigue" and a "moderate effect on fatigability."
Specifically, those who drank the high-flavonoid
version experienced a 45-percent improvement in fatigue and an 80-percent
increase in walking speed.
Participants
in the high-flavonoid group also reported feeling less pain, although the
researchers did not objectively measure this symptom. Coe and colleagues
conclude, "A flavonoid beverage demonstrates the potential to improve
fatigue and fatigability in [relapsing-remitting MS].
"Our
study establishes that the use of dietary interventions is feasible and may
offer possible long-term benefits to support fatigue management by improving
fatigue and walking endurance," continue the authors. Coe and her
colleagues write:
"The use of dietary approaches to reduce fatigue and
associated factors in people with MS may be an easy, safe, and cost-effective
way to have an impact on quality of life and independence, allowing people to
feel more in control of their condition."
However,
the scientists also admit that there is a need for a "full evaluation,
including wider geography, longer follow-up, and cost effectiveness."
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