|
Going nuts in your diet can cut cholesterol
Reported
July 20, 2010
Going nuts in your diet can be good for your
health, according to a study, which showed that eating nuts helps to lower
blood cholesterol levels.
People who ate an average of 67 grams of nuts a day saw a 5.1 per cent fall
in total cholesterol concentration and a 7.4 per cent drop in low density
lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) -- sometimes referred to as bad cholesterol
-- concentration compared to no-nut eaters, the study showed.
People with high triglyceride levels who ate nuts saw a 10.2 per cent fall
in those blood lipid levels, said the study, which analysed data from 25
trials conducted in seven countries, involving 583 men and women aged 19-86
with high or normal cholesterol levels.
All the trial data that were analysed for the study compared nut-eaters to a
control group that did not eat nuts. None of the participants were taking
medication to lower their blood lipids.
Researchers led by Dr Joan Sabate of Loma Linda University in California
found in the study published yesterday in the American Medical Association's
Archives of Internal Medicine that the benefits to health were the same no
matter what nut is eaten.
A person's weight and baseline LDL cholesterol levels did, however,
influence whatever benefits might be derived from eating nuts.
The higher the starting LDL-C, the greater the cholesterol-lowering effects
of nuts, the study found.
And the lower a patient's body mass index -- in other words, if the patient
was not overweight or obese -- the greater the effects of nuts on lowering
cholesterol levels, the study found, urging more research to determine why
nuts are less effective in lowering the blood cholesterol levels of obese
people.
A person's diet also played a role in the effect nuts have on blood
cholesterol levels.
Consumers of Western diets, which are high in saturated fat, got more
benefits from nut-eating than those who already ate a healthy diet, high in
monounsaturated olive oil, fish and fresh fruit and vegetables, the study
found.
And there's more good news: the data analysed for the study showed that the
benefits of eating nuts remain with us for a long time; that nut consumption
appears to reduce the risk of developing type 2 diabetes; and, in spite of
their high fat content, nuts don't necessarily make us fat.
"Research has shown that frequent nut consumption does not lead to weight
gain," said the study. "Increasing the consumption of nuts as part of an
otherwise prudent diet can be expected to favourably affect blood lipid
levels... and have the potential to lower coronary heart disease risk.”
|