The claimEvidence D · marketing folklore
Goji / açaí 'superberries' fight aging and burn fat
The evidence
No human trials for anti-aging/brain claims, the antioxidant pitch rests on withdrawn in-vitro ORAC data, and the FTC fined açaí weight-loss false advertising ($1.5M settlement). They are just decent ordinary fruits.
The mechanism, in brief
Let's check goji's and açaí's three big health claims against human evidence, one by one.
Sources (3)
- Aliouche, H. (News-Medical). (2023). Is açaí berry really a superfood? The science behind its health benefits. Reviews that no human clinical trial has investigated açaí intake on cognitive function, cognitive decline, or neurodegenerative disease; most brain/anti-aging claims are extrapolated from animal and cell-culture studies.
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission. (2012). Internet marketers of acai berry weight-loss pills and 'colon cleansers' to pay $1.5 million to settle FTC charges of deceptive advertising (FTC v. Central Coast Nutraceuticals, Inc.). The FTC found açaí rapid-weight-loss claims and fake celebrity endorsements unsubstantiated and deceptive.
- Cassidy, A., Mukamal, K. J., Liu, L., Franz, M., Eliassen, A. H., & Rimm, E. B. (2013). High anthocyanin intake is associated with a reduced risk of myocardial infarction in young and middle-aged women. Circulation, 127(2), 188-196. Observational; ~93,600 women over 18 years.