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Beans
Beans/Nutrient Depletion:
Cholesterol
Cholesterol: In human and animal research, beans have been found to lower total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides, and increase HDL cholesterol (
2
;
72
; 73;
47
;
46
).
Fatty acids
Fatty acids: In animal research, bean preparations reduced the concentrations of acetic, butyric, and propionic acids (
46
).
Folic acid
Folic acid: In human research, beans were found to reduce serum folic acid, but these levels remained within normal range (
2
). In other human research, beans minimized the difference in absorption of monoglutamyl (PteGlu) and heptaglutamyl folic acid (PteGlu7) (
49
).
Glucose
Glucose: In animal research, bean preparations were found to lower serum glucose (
46
;
70
). Similarly, in diabetic subjects, a one week diet of green beans decreased blood glucose (
47
). In other human research, the increase in postprandial plasma glucose was less with a meal prepared with precooked bean flakes than with potato (
19
;
48
).
Iron
Iron: In human research, polyphenols and phytic acid found in beans were found to contribute to lowering iron absorption (
50
).
Vitamin B12
Vitamin B12: In human research, beans were found to reduce serum vitamin B12 concentrations, but these levels remained within normal range (
2
).