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Glucomannan: properties and therapeutic applications
Nutr Hosp. 2004 Jan-Feb;19(1):45-50. [Article in Spanish]
Gonzalez Canga A, Fernandez Martinez N, Sahagun AM, Garcia Vieitez JJ,
Diez Liebana MJ, Calle Pardo AP, Castro Robles LJ, Sierra Vega M.
Departamento de Farmacologia, Toxicologia, Enfermeria y Fisioterapia,
Facultad de Veterinaria, Universidad de Leon, Campus de Vegazana, s/n,
24071 Leon. dftagc@Zunileon.es
Glucomannan is a dietary fiber employed quite frequently in the western
countries since two decades now, as its ingestion plays an important
role in human health. However, eastern people have used this fiber for
more than a thousand years. This dietary fiber is the main polysaccharide
obtain from the tubers of the Amorphophallus konjac plant, a member
of the family Araceae found in east Asia. The chemical structure of
glucomannan consists, mainly, in mannose and glucose in the ratio 8:5
linked by beta (1-->4) glycosidic bonds. This soluble fiber has a
extraordinarily high waterholding capacity, forming highly viscous solutions
when dissolved in water. It has the highest molecular weight and viscosity
of any known dietary fiber. It has been demonstrated that this product
is highly effective in the treatment of obesity due to the satiety sensation
that it produces; as a remedy for constipation, because it increases
the faeces volume; as hypocholesterolemic agent, interfering in the
transport of cholesterol and of bile acids and as hypoglycemic and hypoinsulinemic
agent, probably, by delaying gastric emptying and slowering glucose
delivery to the intestinal mucosa. To the beneficial properties of this
fiber, several disadvantages can be added as the production of flatulence,
abdominal pain, esophageal obstruction, lower gastrointestinal obstruction
or even the possible modification of the bioavailability of other drugs.
This paper reviews the main characteristics of glucomannan, as well
as its properties, physiologic effects and therapeutic uses.
Publication Types:
Review
Review, Tutorial
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