Safranal-Standardized Saffron Extract Improves Metabolic, Cognitive, and Anxiolytic Outcomes in Aged Mice via Hypothalamic–Amygdalar Peptide Modulation
Juan A. Navarro, Ana Gavito, Sonia Rivas, Alonso Rodríguez-Martín, Elena Baixeras, Juan Decara, Pedro J. Serrano-Castro, Yolanda Alfonso, Carlos Sanjuan, Antonia Serrano, Fernando Rodríguez de Fonseca

TL;DR
A standardized saffron extract improves memory, reduces anxiety, and supports metabolism in old mice by affecting brain peptides.
Contribution
Demonstrates that standardized saffron extract has multi-target effects on aging-related conditions in mice.
Findings
Low-dose saffron extract prevents age-related weight loss and modulates liver lipid metabolism.
High-dose saffron extract reduces anxiety and improves memory in aged mice.
Saffron extract alters brain peptides linked to anxiety and memory, such as Npy, Crh, and Hcrt.
Abstract
Background: Population aging increases susceptibility to cognitive decline, anxiety, and metabolic dysregulation, yet safe and effective interventions remain limited. Saffron (Crocus sativus L.) has been traditionally used to enhance mood and cognition, and its main metabolites, crocins and safranal, exert neuroprotective, anxiolytic, and metabolic effects. However, variability in extract composition and frequent adulteration hinder reproducibility. Objectives: To clarify the efficacy of genuine saffron preparations in aging, we investigated a saffron extract standardized for safranal and crocin content (SSE). Methods: Safranal bioavailability was first characterized in rats, followed by an evaluation of behavioral, neuroendocrine, and metabolic outcomes after 35 days of oral SSE administration (25 or 200 mg/kg/day) in 25-month-old male C57BL/6 mice. Behavioral performance was assessed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSaffron Plant Research Studies · Neurological Disease Mechanisms and Treatments · Regulation of Appetite and Obesity
