Eggs 'not linked to cardiovascular risk'
People should not hold off from eating eggs in fear of developing heart disease, says a nutrition expert.
A
randomised control trial, published on Monday, found eating up to 12 eggs a week does not
increase cardiovascular risk factors, even for people with type 2
diabetes.
In the past there has been debate about egg consumption over concern eggs raise blood cholesterol levels.
In
Australia, experts recommend a maximum of six
eggs per week for people with type 2 diabetes, who are at greater risk
of cardiovascular disease.
But
Dr. of Obesity,
Nutrition, Exercise and Eating Disorders,
says the recommendation is based on outdated science and should be
changed.
"In
the past it has been reported that people that were on high egg diets
were more likely to develop heart disease, type 2 diabetes but a lot of
those didn't explain for different factors like what else was in the
diet," he said.
Dr. says it's more likely the foods high in saturated fat that are
often served with eggs, such as butter or bacon, that are harmful.
"People can be having many more eggs than what we are currently being told in Australia," he said.
For
the trial, participants were
put on either a high-egg (12 eggs per week) or low-egg (less than two
eggs per week) diet for 12 months.
After
the first three months of the trial, participants were put on a weight
loss program where they were educated on swapping foods high in
saturated fats with good fats, for example swapping butter with olive
oil or avocado.
Researchers tracked a broad range of cardiovascular risk factors including cholesterol, blood sugar and blood pressure.
At the end of the trial, both groups of participants showed no adverse changes in cardiovascular risk markers, the Dr. said.
"While
eggs themselves are high in dietary cholesterol - and people with type 2
diabetes tend to have higher levels of the 'bad' low density
lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol - this study supports existing research
that shows consumption of eggs has little effect on the levels of
cholesterol in the blood of the people eating them," he explained.
The
research, also
showed the different egg diets had no impact on weight loss.
"Eggs
are a nutritious food and having up to 12 eggs a week will not have an
adverse effect on your cardiovascular risk profile or diabetes risk," the Dr.
said.
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Labels: avocado, bacon, blood sugar, BP, butter, Cholesterol, don't increase heart disease risk, eggs, saturated fats, type 2 diabetes
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