Eating walnuts daily may lower heart disease risk
Eating whole walnuts
daily may help lower blood pressure in people at the risk of developing
cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to a study.
The research, examined the effects of replacing some of the saturated
fats in participants' diets with walnuts.
Researchers
found that when participants ate whole walnuts daily in combination with
lower overall amounts of saturated fat,they had lower central blood
pressure.
According to the researchers, central pressure is the pressure that is
exerted on organs like the heart.
This measure, like blood pressure measured in the arm the traditional
way, provides information about a person's risk of developing CVD.
The study suggests that
because walnuts lowered central pressure, their risk of CVD may have
also decreased, said a researcher.
"When participants ate whole walnuts, they saw greater benefits than when they consumed
a diet with a similar fatty acid profile as walnuts without eating the
nut itself," said a researcher.
"So it seems like there's a little something extra in walnuts that are
beneficial -- maybe their bioactive compounds,maybe the fibre, maybe
something else -- that you don't get in the fatty acids alone," she
said.
A researcher said the study was one of
the first to try to uncover which parts of the walnuts help support
heart health.
"Walnuts contain alpha-linolenic acid -- ALA -- a plant-based omega-3 that may positively affect blood pressure," she said.
"Putting everyone on
the same diet for two weeks prior to the start of the study helped put
everyone on the same starting plane," she said.
"The run-in diet
included 12 per cent of their calories from saturated fat, which mimics
an average American diet. This way, when the participants started on the
study diets, we knew for sure that the walnuts or other oils replaced
saturated fats," she said.
After the run-in diet,
the participants were randomly assigned to one of three study diets, all
of which included less saturated fat than the run-in diet.
The diets included one
that incorporated whole walnuts, one that included the same amount of
ALA and polyunsaturated fatty acids without walnuts, and one that
partially substituted oleic acid (another fatty acid) for the same
amount of ALA found in walnuts, without any walnuts.
All three diets
substituted walnuts or vegetable oils for five per cent of the saturated
fat content of the run-in diet, and all participants followed each diet
for six weeks, with a break between diet periods.
Following each diet
period, the researchers assessed the participants for several
cardiovascular risk factors including central systolic and diastolic
blood pressure, brachial pressure, cholesterol, and arterial stiffness.
They found that while
all treatment diets had a positive effect on cardiovascular outcomes,
the diet with whole walnuts provided the greatest benefits, including
lower central diastolic blood pressure.
In contrast to brachial
pressure -- which is the pressure moving away from your heart and
measured with an arm cuff in the doctor's office -- central pressure is
the pressure moving towards your heart.
"Seeing the positive benefits from all three diets sends a message that regardless of whether you replace saturated fats with unsaturated fats from walnuts or vegetable oils, you should see cardiovascular benefits," she said.
THIS IS ONLY FOR INFORMATION, ALWAYS CONSULT YOU PHYSICIAN BEFORE
HAVING ANY PARTICULAR FOOD/ MEDICATION/EXERCISE/OTHER REMEDIES.
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Labels: alpha-linolenic acid(ALA), bioactive compounds, CVD(cardiovascular disease), fibre, lowers BP, polyphenols, walnuts
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