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Can Eating Mangoes Reduce Women’s Facial Wrinkles?

Pilot Study Shows Promising Results

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photo of honey mangoes
Study finds women who ate just a half cup of honey mangoes four times a week saw a decrease in wrinkles. (Getty Images)

Quick Summary

  • Women who ate a half cup four times a week saw a decrease in wrinkles after two months
  • Women who ate more, a cup and a half, for same time periods saw an increase in wrinkles
  • Group consuming smaller amounts saw improvements in severity, length and width of fine, deep and emerging wrinkles

Mangoes, like other orange fruits and vegetables, are rich in beta-carotene and provide antioxidants that may delay cell damage. A from researchers at the University of California, Davis, finds eating Ataulfo mangoes, also known as honey or Champagne mangoes, may have another benefit — reducing facial wrinkles in older women with fairer skin. The study was published in the journal Nutrients.

Postmenopausal women who ate a half cup of Ataulfo mangoes four times a week saw a 23 percent decrease in deep wrinkles after two months and a 20 percent decrease after four months.

“That’s a significant improvement in wrinkles,” said lead author Vivien Fam, a doctoral student in the °ϲĻϢ Davis Department of Nutrition. But the findings are very specific and come with a caveat.

“Women who ate a cup and a half of mangoes for the same periods of time saw an increase in wrinkles. This shows that while some mango may be good for skin health, too much of it may not be,” Fam said.

Researchers said it’s unclear why consuming more mango would increase the severity of wrinkles but speculate that it may be related to a robust amount of sugar in the larger portion of mangoes.

Quantifiable results

The randomized clinical pilot study involved 28 postmenopausal women with Fitzpatrick skin types II or III (skin that burns more easily than tans). Women were divided into two groups: one group consumed a half cup of mangoes four times a week for four months, and another consumed a cup and a half for the same period of time. Facial wrinkles were evaluated using a high-resolution camera system.

“The system we used to analyze wrinkles allowed us to not just visualize wrinkles, but to quantify and measure wrinkles,” said Robert Hackman, professor in the Department of Nutrition and corresponding author of the study. “This is extremely accurate and allowed us to capture more than just the appearance of wrinkles or what the eye might see.”

The study looked at the severity, length and width of fine, deep and emerging wrinkles. Fam said the group that consumed a half cup of mangoes saw improvements in all categories.

Fam said further research is needed to learn the mechanisms behind the reduction in wrinkles. She said it may be due to the beneficial effects of carotenoids (orange or red plant pigments), and other phytonutrients that could help build collagen.

Other authors, all from °ϲĻϢ Davis, include Roberta Holt, Department of Nutrition; Carl Keen, departments of Nutrition and Internal Medicine; and Raja Sivamani, Department of Dermatology. Research support came from the National Mango Board.

Media Resources

Vivien Fam, Department of Nutrition, wfam@ucdavis.edu

Robert Hackman, Department of Nutrition, 530-754-9835, rmhackman@ucdavis.edu

Amy Quinton, News and Media Relations, 530-601-8077, amquinton@ucdavis.edu

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Food & Agriculture Human & Animal Health

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