Dietary Cocoa Flavanols Do Not Alter Brain Excitability in Young Healthy Adults

Raphael Hamel*, Rebecca Oyler, Evie Harms, Rosamond Bailey, Catarina Rendeiro, Ned Jenkinson

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

The ingestion of dietary cocoa flavanols acutely alters functions of the cerebral endothelium, but whether the effects of flavanols permeate beyond this to alter other brain functions remains unclear. Based on converging evidence, this work tested the hypothesis that cocoa flavanols would alter brain excitability in young healthy adults. In a randomised, cross-over, double-blinded, placebo-controlled design, transcranial magnetic stimulation was used to assess corticospinal and intracortical excitability before as well as 1 and 2 h post-ingestion of a beverage containing either high (695 mg flavanols, 150 mg (−)-epicatechin) or low levels (5 mg flavanols, 0 mg (−)-epicatechin) of cocoa flavanols. In addition to this acute intervention, the effects of a short-term chronic intervention where the same cocoa flavanol doses were ingested once a day for 5 consecutive days were also investigated. For both the acute and chronic interventions, the results revealed no robust alteration in corticospinal or intracortical excitability. One possibility is that cocoa flavanols yield no net effect on brain excitability, but predominantly alter functions of the cerebral endothelium in young healthy adults. Future studies should increase intervention durations to maximize the acute and chronic accumulation of flavanols in the brain, and further investigate if cocoa flavanols would be more effective at altering brain excitability in older adults and clinical populations than in younger adults.
Original languageEnglish
Article number969
Number of pages17
JournalNutrients
Volume16
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Mar 2024

Bibliographical note

Funding:
R.H. was funded with a postdoctoral scholarship (B3X) from the Fonds de Recherche du Québec—Nature et Technologie (Québec, QC, Canada). E.H. and R.B. were supported by a Dunhill Medical Trust Multi PhD Award.

Keywords

  • long intracortical inhibition (LICI)
  • short intracortical inhibition (SICI)
  • cocoa flavanols
  • corticospinal silent period (CSP)
  • corticospinal excitability (CSE)
  • short intracortical facilitation (SICF)
  • paired-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation (ppTMS)
  • intracortical facilitation (ICF)
  • brain excitability

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