The Mitochondrial Research Archive

A curated library of peer-reviewed literature exploring the frontiers of cellular energy,
metabolic resilience, and the science of human vitality.

Flavonoids, Mitochondria, and Skeletal Muscle Health

Study Title: Beneficial Effects of Flavonoids on Skeletal Muscle Health: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Citation: Munguía et al., 2022 · Journal of Medicinal Food

What the Study Found: This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated preclinical and clinical studies on flavonoids and skeletal muscle health. The authors included 103 studies, 80 in rodents and 23 in humans, covering flavonoids from sources such as green tea, cacao, and other polyphenol-rich compounds. In the meta-analysis, flavonoid supplementation was associated with improved endurance performance, skeletal muscle cross-sectional area, and muscle mass in rodent studies, although heterogeneity was high. The review also summarized reported effects on mitochondrial bioenergetics, oxidative stress, inflammation, apoptosis, autophagy, and muscle metabolism.

What this means in real life: This review supports the idea that flavonoids, especially flavan-3-ols such as epicatechin-related compounds, may influence several biological systems tied to muscle quality and resilience. The strongest pooled evidence came from preclinical studies, while the authors noted that clinical evidence was still limited. This does not mean flavonoids treat sarcopenia, cachexia, or muscle disease. It does suggest that skeletal muscle health is closely connected to mitochondrial function, oxidative balance, metabolism, and recovery pathways that are worth studying further in humans.

Clinical Relevance: Systematic review and meta-analysis of preclinical and clinical studies, focused on flavonoids, skeletal muscle performance, muscle mass, mitochondrial function, and muscle health.

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