
By Julian Everson
Unexpected Benefits of
Olive Leaf Extract
Scientists have
isolated the unique molecule that provides olive oil with its multitude of
health and life-extending benefits. Known as oleuropein, it is the polyphenol
that can help lower bad cholesterol and blood pressure, prevent cancer, protect
against oxidative damage, and help guard against cognitive decline.1,2
Oleuropein provides the distinctive tangy, pungent, almost bitter flavor found
in high quality extra virgin olive oils.2 It’s also responsible for most of
olive oil’s antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and disease-fighting characteristics.2-4
In fact, when oleuropein was given to animals with tumors, the tumors
completely regressed and disappeared in 9 to 12 days!5
The olive tree (Olea
europaea) produces oleuropein abundantly in its leaves as well as in the olive
fruit itself, and special processing techniques now allow for the extraction of
a stable, standardized form of oleuropein. That means that consumers can have
access to one of the most beneficial components of olive oil without the
necessity of consuming excessive amounts of olive oil.
Olive leaf extracts and
their oleuropein constituents are best known for their blood pressure-lowering
effects, but the latest studies reveal their health benefits extend well beyond
that. Additional anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties offer promise in
fighting atherosclerosis, diabetes, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and
even arthritis.
Blood Pressure
Animal studies
demonstrate that olive leaf extracts lead to significant drops in elevated
blood pressure.6,7 Remarkably, these effects are evident when supplementation
occurs either before or after the animals develop hypertension. This means that
the extracts have the ability to both prevent and treat high blood pressure.8
The drop in blood
pressure is accompanied by reduced pressure in the heart’s left ventricle. This
results in improved blood flow to the heart’s own coronary blood vessels.
Additional human studies demonstrate the ability of olive leaf extracts to
significantly reduce blood pressure measurements.9
One particularly fascinating
study was conducted among identical twins with borderline hypertension (blood
pressure in the range of 120-139 mmHg over 80-89 mmHg).10 Studies of identical
twins virtually eliminate genetic variations which may impact study results.
After 8 weeks, placebo recipients showed no change in blood pressure from
baseline, but patients supplemented with 1,000 mg/day of olive leaf extract
dropped their pressures by a mean of 11 mmHg systolic and 4 mmHg diastolic.10
The supplemented patients experienced significant reductions in LDL
cholesterol.
A human study measured
olive leaf extract against captopril, one of the conventional drugs used for
treating hypertension.11 In this study, patients with stage-1 hypertension
(140-159 mmHg over 90-99 mmHg) took either 500 mg of olive leaf extract twice daily,
or 12.5 mg of captopril twice daily, which was increased as needed to 25 mg
twice daily. After 8 weeks of treatment, both groups experienced a drop in mean
blood pressure from baseline (11.5 and 13.7 mmHg systolic; 4.8 and 6.4 mmHg
diastolic, respectively), with no significant difference between the two
groups. In other words, the olive leaf extract performed as well as the
prescription drug. A closer look in the laboratory reveals the reason for this
equivalence. Although they utilize different mechanisms of action (oleuropein
acts as a natural calcium channel blocker and captopril is a well-known
ACE-inhibitor), both oleuropein and captopril function inside the vasculature
to decrease the tension in the walls of blood vessels and promote widening of the
vessels (vasodilation), ultimately lowering blood pressure.12-15
The proven blood
pressure-lowering effects of olive leaf extracts are potent enough to warrant
caution if you are taking prescription blood pressure drugs.60 If you are on
blood pressure medication, it’s essential that you speak to your prescriber
before starting supplementation.
Blood pressure is only
one measure of cardiovascular health; arterial health is equally important. The
endothelial cells that line arterial walls play a key role in maintaining blood
flow and pressure; they also regulate the distribution of smooth muscle cells
and sustain an even flow of blood through vessels. Endothelial dysfunction is
one of the earliest stages in hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis),
which occurs when plaques build up in the arterial walls. These plaques
eventually block blood flow and can trigger a heart attack or stroke.
Olive leaf extracts
fight endothelial dysfunction at multiple levels. They increase the production
of nitric oxide, a signaling molecule that helps relax blood vessels.16,17 They
reduce the production and activity of a class of molecules known as matrix
metalloproteinases, or MMPs.18-20 Excessive MMP activity literally dissolves
the gel-like matrix that holds cells together, making vessel linings
increasingly vulnerable to plaque damage. They also help prevent the oxidation
of LDL-cholesterol, which is one of the earliest events in developing
atherosclerosis.21-23 Oxidized LDL triggers inflammation, further damaging
arteries, and olive leaf extract has multi-targeted anti-inflammatory
effects.20,24,25
Polyphenol compounds
found in olive leaves have been shown to help directly prevent the formation of
arterial plaques (and thereby reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke) in
two ways. First, they reduce the production and activity of a series of
“adhesion molecules.”26-28 These substances cause white blood cells and
platelets to stick to arterial walls, resulting in early plaque formation.
Second, they reduce platelet aggregation (clumping) by multiple mechanisms,
which reduces the risk that tiny clots will form at sites of plaque to produce
a stroke or heart attack.29,30
Diabetes
Cancer
The diabetic (and
pre-diabetic) state of chronic blood sugar elevation imposes substantial
oxidative stress throughout the body, triggering inflammation and tissue damage
that rapidly accelerates aging. Treatments for diabetes have two main goals: 1)
lowering blood glucose to normal levels and 2) limiting the damage done by the
inevitable blood sugar spikes that still occur.
Olive leaf extracts are
showing real promise in both of these areas. In animal and basic lab studies,
olive leaf extracts and oleuropein have been found to lower blood sugar through
several mechanisms.31-34 They slow the digestion of starches into simple
sugars, slow absorption of those sugars from the intestine, and increase the
uptake of glucose into tissues from the blood.31,32 They protect tissues from
the oxidant damage caused when glucose binds to proteins in the process called
glycation.33,34 They also increase levels of other natural antioxidant systems
in the body, broadening the degree of protection.33
These mechanisms have
directly observable benefits. Studies show that diabetic animals supplemented
with olive leaf extracts experience significant reductions in blood sugar and
cholesterol.33-35 In a dramatic head-to-head study, diabetic rats were treated
with either olive leaf extract or glyburide (Diabeta®), a common
glucose-lowering drug.35 By the end of the study, the antidiabetic effects of
the extract proved superior to those of the drug.35
One intriguing study
showed that when lab rats were fed a high-fat, high-carbohydrate diet, they
developed all the signs of metabolic syndrome (excessive abdominal fat,
hypertension, abnormal lipid profile, and impaired cases, normalized.36
Human studies reveal
that supplementing with 500 mg of olive leaf extract once daily resulted in
significant reductions in hemoglobin A1c levels, the standard marker of
long-term exposure to elevated blood sugar in diabetic people.31
Supplementation also lowered fasting plasma insulin levels, an important point
because chronic insulin elevations may contribute to diabetics’ higher cancer
risks.31,37
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Widespread Benefits of
Olive Leaf
The Mediterranean diet
offers a host of benefits that prolong life and improve health.
Olive oil, a major
component of the Mediterranean diet, contains a unique compound called
oleuropein that provides its characteristic biting, astringent taste.
Oleuropein is
responsible for most of olive oil’s antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and
disease-fighting characteristics.
Olive leaves contain
high amounts of oleuropein, making their extracts a valuable source of this
nutrient without the need to consume large amounts of olive oil.
Olive leaf extracts
show tremendous promise in preventing or mitigating conditions as diverse as
hypertension, heart disease, diabetes, cancer, stroke, Alzheimer’s, and
arthritis.
Cancer
The Mediterranean diet
is renowned for its ability to reduce the risk of cancer.38,39 While numerous
aspects of the diet contribute to this risk reduction, there’s growing evidence
that olive oil—and specifically its oleuropein content—are key components of
the diet’s anti-cancer effects.
Studies show that
oleuropein’s antioxidant effects help it battle cancer formation at its
earliest stages. Olive leaf extracts inhibit DNA damage from reactive oxygen
species, which is the very first step in development of malignant cells.40 Once
cells become cancerous, they rely on a host of chemical signaling factors that
promote their growth and organization into tumors. Olive leaf compounds are
known to inhibit growth factors and disrupt signalling pathways.41-43
Oleuropein also suppresses an enzyme cancer cells rely on to derive and store
energy from dietary carbohydrates.44
Oleuropein and olive
leaf extracts have numerous other mechanisms of action against cancer:
They help prevent
inflammation, another major promoter of tumor growth.41
In breast cancer cells
specifically, oleuropein reduces malignant cells’ ability to respond to
estrogen, the female hormone that many breast cancer cells depend on for their
survival.43
Oleuropein inhibits the
production of the “protein-melting” enzymes that cancer cells need in order to
invade healthy tissues and metastasize to distant parts of the body.19
These mechanisms have
now been shown in laboratory and animal studies to reduce the rates of
occurrence, and subsequent development, of a broad variety of cancers,
including those of the brain, head and neck, breast, liver, bladder, prostate,
and skin, as well as leukemia.42,43,45-49
In one especially vivid
study, mice with a high spontaneous cancer rate were orally supplemented with
oleuropein.5 The tumors completely regressed and disappeared in 9 to 12 days.5
When the tumors were examined before they vanished, they were found to have a
disordered, crumbly consistency, and no cancer cells remained alive within.5
Neuroprotection
Neuroprotection
Olive extracts help
protect the brain and central nervous system from the destruction brought on by
strokes and age-related degenerative conditions such as Alzheimer’s and
Parkinson’s diseases.50 They accomplish this by suppressing inflammation and
reducing the damage done by oxidative stress.
In acute brain injuries
such as those caused by a stroke or trauma, damaging processes such as
oxidative stress occur within minutes of the original event—and, ironically,
are worsened by the return of normal blood flow to the area.50,51
Researchers found a
number of positive effects in animals that were pre-treated with olive leaf
extract and then induced with a stroke. Compared with untreated animals, the
treated animals experienced a sharp reduction in markers of oxidation and an
increase in normal cellular antioxidant systems.52,53 Microscopic examination
of brain tissue revealed a similar decline in injury to brain cells and up to a
55% decrease in the volume of dying brain tissue.50 Similar results are shown
in experimental spinal cord injury in animals pretreated with oleuropein.53
Olive leaf extracts
offer similar protection for neurodegenerative diseases. Oxidative stress
occurs more gradually in neurodegenerative diseases. However, the effects add
up over a lifetime, producing inflammation and other changes that result in the
accumulation of abnormal proteins that interfere with brain function and kill
neurons. Olive leaf extracts help prevent these abnormal proteins from
assembling into the neurofibrillary tangles seen in the brains of people with
Alzheimer’s and similar diseases.54-56
Arthritis
Olive leaves and their
extracts have long been used in the Mediterranean as folk remedies for
arthritis. Now, scientific evidence has proven that olive leaf extracts can in
fact interfere with the development of several different kinds of arthritis,
including gout, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoarthritis.
Gout is caused by the
accumulation of uric acid crystals in joints, the byproducts of impaired
recycling of DNA and RNA in cells. In a mechanism identical to that of
allopurinol (the gold standard drug therapy for gout), oleuropein prevents the
buildup of uric acid by inhibiting xanthine oxidase, the enzyme responsible for
converting DNA and RNA into uric acid.57
Oleuropein has also
been found to help prevent and treat symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis. When
administered at the earliest sign of arthritis in animal models, oleuropein
prevented symptoms from developing and also produced marked improvement in the
microscopic appearance of joint tissue from affected animals. When administered
after arthritis was fully developed, there was significant improvement in
inflammatory changes to joints, compared with untreated animals.58
Oleuropein had similar
benefits on osteoarthritis. In animal models of this degenerative joint
disease, olive leaf extract improved joint swelling, improved the microscopic
appearance of joint tissue, and prevented the production of inflammatory
cytokines.59
Summary
The Mediterranean diet
reduces your risk for virtually every condition associated with aging. Olive
oil is a major component of that diet. Olive leaves contain higher amounts of
oleuropein, a polyphenol with unique health-improving attributes. These
extracts have been used in traditional medicine for centuries to improve
age-related diseases.
Now, scientific
evidence has shown that these extracts have a remarkable impact on blood
pressure and heart disease—and they can help protect against other age-related
chronic conditions as well. Convincing evidence now shows that oleuropein-rich
olive leaf extracts help prevent many of the underlying factors leading to
diabetes, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, stroke, and arthritis.
Extra-virgin olive oil
and olive leaf extract should be considered an important component of one’s
health and longevity program.
If you have any
questions on the scientific content of this article, please call a Life
Extension® Health Advisor at 1-866-864-3027.
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