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Nutrition fact of the day: How bok choy (pak choi) supports gut, bone and heart health

TIMESOFINDIA.COM | Last updated on - Dec 24, 2025, 12:30 IST
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Nutrition fact of the day: How bok choy (pak choi) supports gut, bone and heart health

Among various cruciferous vegetables is bok choy, a crunchy Asian veggie rich in dietary fiber, vitamins K and C, calcium, potassium, as well as antioxidant properties. While human RCTs involving bok choy cannot be found, studies involving animal subjects give strong evidence of its mechanisms.

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Gut health​

In “Impact of Anaerobic Fermentation Liquid on Bok Choy and Mechanism of Combined Vitamin C from Bok Choy and Allicin in Treatment of DSS Colitis” (Pan et al., Foods 2025), vitamin C from bok choy increased the fermentation of complex carbohydrates by beneficial intestinal microbes in colitic mice, reducing inflammation, colon invasions by bacteria, and infection rates. This combination reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-1β, IL-6--and TNF-α, while also improving the integrity of the intestinal barrier. The study “Human Gut Bacterial Communities Are Altered by Addition of Cruciferous Vegetables to the Diet” (Li et al., J. Nutr. 2009) established that vegetables like bok choy increased beneficial human microbes two weeks post-supplementation--increasing Eubacterium hallii, which promotes microbial diversity and the production of short-chain fatty acids. These acts relieve bloating, regularize bowel movements, and provides continuous protection against infection.

3/4

Bone health​

Bok choy contains 6% of the daily calcium requirement, 27% of vitamin K value in raw form per cup, along with iron, phosphorus, magnesium, zinc, which works for density and collagen formation, according to NIH profiles. “The Effects of Vitamin K-Rich Green Leafy Vegetables on Bone Metabolism” (2020) states how these values help enhance the values of bone turnover in adulthood by facilitating remodeling processes in the body. A balanced mix wards off osteoporosis by relocating calcium from the body into the bones with age.

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Cardiovascular system benefits

Bok-choy enhances growth, lipid metabolism, and related gene expression in Syrian Golden hamsters fed with a high-fat diet (Naseri etal., Food & Funct 2020) fed hamsters 5-7% bok choy, reducing total cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL, and liver enzymes dramatically while increasing HDL. It suppressed fat genes such as FASN and HMG-CoA and stimulated PPAR-alpha for improved lipid homeostasis. Potassium, calcium, magnesium balanced sodium to regulate blood pressure, and folate normalized homocysteine according to clinical guidance. Outcomes from the cohort identify anti-inflammatory properties that indicate lower incidence related to cruciferous vegetables like bok choy.

Use bok choy in stir-fries, soups, and salads weekly. It has low caloric content, making it stackable. This study supports bok choy in hamster lipid studies, mouse colitis studies, and human feeding studies. It can be more effective if walked along, and taken other dietary precautions with it.

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