Research suggests that polyphenol-rich berry-based diets, which may include acai as a component, show some preliminary promise in the context of neuroprotection and nutritional support, with one animal study finding that a berry polyphenol-enriched diet helped preserve dopamine-producing neurons, reduce neuroinflammation, and prevent motor deficits in a mouse model of Parkinson's disease. The available evidence consists of a single preclinical animal study pointing in a supportive direction and one cross-sectional human study examining kidney and vascular biomarkers in Chagas disease patients that does not directly address acai or nutritional supplementation, making the overall body of evidence quite limited and indirect. Studies indicate that translating findings from mouse models to human nutritional outcomes requires significant caution, and no human clinical trials or controlled studies directly examining acai bowls as a nutritional intervention were identified in this review. Readers should be aware that the current evidence base is too preliminary and narrow to draw firm conclusions about the nutritional support benefits of acai bowls specifically.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Renal and endothelial biomarkers in Chagas disease in the Brazilian Amazon re... | Other | 2025 | Neutral | 62 |
| From berries to brain: Assessing the impact of (poly)phenols in the MPTP mous... | Other | 2025 | Supports | 57 |