Fuente:
Molecules - Revista científica (MDPI)
Molecules, Vol. 31, Pages 1827: Extra-Virgin Olive Oil Phenolics in IBD-Associated Vascular Risk
Molecules doi: 10.3390/molecules31111827
Authors:
Roko Šantić
Marko Kumrić
Lovre Martinović
Marino Vilović
Iris Jerončić Tomić
Ivan Cvitković
Joško Božić
High-phenolic extra-virgin olive oil (EVOO) is a chemically dynamic bioactive matrix in which cultivar, ripening stage, processing, storage, and digestion shape the final profile of phenolic alcohols and secoiridoids. In inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), chronic intestinal inflammation is associated with barrier dysfunction, dysbiosis, systemic immune activation, endothelial injury, platelet hyperreactivity, and increased cardiovascular risk. This narrative review evaluates whether EVOO phenolics may intersect the gut–endothelium–platelet axis linking IBD to vascular and thromboinflammatory complications. The review focuses on hydroxytyrosol, tyrosol, oleuropein- and ligstroside-derived secoiridoids, oleocanthal, and oleacein, with emphasis on their biosynthetic origin, processing-driven transformations, bioavailability, metabolism, and biological targets. Current evidence supports plausible effects on epithelial barrier integrity, TLR4/NF-κB signalling, Nrf2-mediated antioxidant defence, oxidised LDL formation, endothelial activation, and platelet-related pathways. Nevertheless, direct clinical evidence in IBD patients remains limited, and most cardiovascular-relevant findings are extrapolated from non-IBD human trials, animal studies, or in vitro models. Chemically characterised, biomarker-anchored intervention trials are needed before high-phenolic EVOO can be considered a validated strategy for modifying cardiovascular risk in IBD.