PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study suggests whole diet approach to lower CV risk has more evidence than low-fat diets

Mediterranean-style diets most successful, reports The American Journal of Medicine

2014-02-06
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Jane Grochowski
ajmmedia@elsevier.com
215-239-3712
Elsevier Health Sciences
Study suggests whole diet approach to lower CV risk has more evidence than low-fat diets Mediterranean-style diets most successful, reports The American Journal of Medicine Philadelphia, PA, February 5, 2014 – A study published in The American Journal of Medicine reveals that a whole diet approach, which focuses on increased intake of fruits, vegetables, nuts, and fish, has more evidence for reducing cardiovascular risk than strategies that focus exclusively on reduced dietary fat. This new study explains that while strictly low-fat diets have the ability to lower cholesterol, they are not as conclusive in reducing cardiac deaths. By analyzing major diet and heart disease studies conducted over the last several decades, investigators found that participants directed to adopt a whole diet approach instead of limiting fat intake had a greater reduction in cardiovascular death and non-fatal myocardial infarction.

Early investigations of the relationship between food and heart disease linked high levels of serum cholesterol to increased intake of saturated fat, and subsequently, an increased rate of coronary heart disease. This led to the American Heart Association's recommendation to limit fat intake to less than 30% of daily calories, saturated fat to 10%, and cholesterol to less than 300 mg per day.

"Nearly all clinical trials in the 1960s, 70s and 80s compared usual diets to those characterized by low total fat, low saturated fat, low dietary cholesterol, and increased polyunsaturated fats," says study co-author James E. Dalen, MD, MPH, Weil Foundation, and University of Arizona College of Medicine. "These diets did reduce cholesterol levels. However they did not reduce the incidence of myocardial infarction or coronary heart disease deaths."

Carefully analyzing studies and trials from 1957 to the present, investigators found that the whole diet approach, and specifically Mediterranean-style diets, are effective in preventing heart disease, even though they may not lower total serum or LDL cholesterol. The Mediterranean-style diet is low in animal products and saturated fat, and encourages intake of monounsaturated fats found in nuts and olive oil. In particular, the diet emphasizes consumption of vegetables, fruit, legumes, whole grains, and fish.

"The potency of combining individual cardioprotective foods is substantial – and perhaps even stronger than many of the medications and procedures that have been the focus of modern cardiology," explains co-author Stephen Devries, MD, FACC, Gaples Institute for Integrative Cardiology (Deerfield, IL) and Division of Cardiology, Northwestern University (Chicago, IL). "Results from trials emphasizing dietary fat reduction were a disappointment, prompting subsequent studies incorporating a whole diet approach with a more nuanced recommendation for fat intake."

Based on the data from several influential studies, which are reviewed in the article, Dalen and Devries concluded that emphasizing certain food groups, while encouraging people to decrease others, is more cardioprotective and overall better at preventing heart disease than a blanket low-fat diet. Encouraging the consumption of olive oil over butter and cream, while increasing the amount of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, nuts, and fish promises to be more effective.

"The last fifty years of epidemiology and clinical trials have established a clear link between diet, atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular events," concludes Dr. Dalen. "Nutritional interventions have proven that a 'whole diet' approach with equal attention to what is consumed as well as what is excluded is more effective in preventing cardiovascular disease than low fat, low cholesterol diets."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bundles of nerves and arteries provide wealth of new stem cell information

2014-02-06
A new Ostrow School of Dentistry of ...

Birds of a different color

2014-02-06
SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 6, 2014 – Scientists at the University of Utah identified mutations in three key genes that determine feather color in domestic rock pigeons. The same genes control pigmentation ...

Pacific salmon inherit a magnetic sense of direction

2014-02-06
Even young hatchery salmon with no prior experience of the world outside will orient themselves according to the Earth's magnetic field in the direction of the marine feeding grounds frequented by their ancestors. These findings, ...

How our immune system backfires and allows bacteria like Salmonella to grow

2014-02-06
Our immune system wages an internal battle every day to protect us against a broad range of infections. However, researchers have found that our immune response can sometimes make us vulnerable to the ...

Scientists reprogram skin cells into insulin-producing pancreas cells

2014-02-06
SAN FRANCISCO, CA—February 6, 2014—A cure for type 1 diabetes has long eluded even the top experts. Not because ...

Powerful bacterial immune response defined by new study

2014-02-06
T-cells, the elite guard of the immune system in humans and other mammals, ignore normal biologic protocol and swing into high gear when attacked by certain fast-moving bacteria, reports a team of researchers ...

Histones may hold the key to the generation of totipotent stem cells

2014-02-06
One major challenge in stem cell research has been to reprogram differentiated cells to a totipotent state. Researchers from RIKEN in Japan have identified a duo of histone proteins that dramatically enhance the generation ...

The 'entrance exam' that is key to a successful pregnancy

2014-02-06
Researchers have discovered how an 'entrance exam' set by the womb determines if the implantation of an embryo is successful; potentially a milestone for advances in pregnancy treatments. The new study, led ...

New disease gene discovery sheds light on cause of bone marrow failure

2014-02-06
The study, published in The American Journal of Human Genetics, detected and identified a new disease gene (ERCC6L2). In its normal form, the gene plays a key role in protecting ...

Link confirmed between salmon migration, magnetic field

2014-02-06
CORVALLIS, Ore. – A team of scientists last year presented evidence of a correlation between the migration patterns of ocean salmon and the Earth's magnetic field, suggesting it may help explain how ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Postpartum Medicaid extensions reduce uninsurance

Some Canadians are willing to eat insect-based food — but conditions apply

Major collaboration launched to protect Lake Erie and Rouge River

Engineered bacteria deliver cancer drug directly inside tumors in mice

Heart disease risk tied to certain molecules made by gut microbes

Dual role of a protein in driving bone cancer in children discovered

Search robot thinks for itself

Researchers find more effective approach to revealing Majorana zero modes in superconductors

HSE biologists identify factors that accelerate breast cancer recurrence

Using AI to improve standard-of-care cardiac imaging 

Stanford researchers develop novel "scaffold-free" approach for treating damaged muscles

Qubits created using unexpected materials

Superconductor advance could unlock ultra-energy-efficient electronics

Closing your eyes might not help you hear better after all

New computational biology tool automates and standardizes genome sequencing analysis

Climate change is fueling disease outbreaks

Three anesthesia drugs all have the same effect in the brain, MIT researchers find

Violence against women who inject drugs

Math can tell you how to manage your eczema

Adherence to healthy lifestyle and risk of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals with hypertension

Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales

Thoughts don’t kill people, but study suggests options for keeping guns from doing so

Historian Lyndal Roper named 2026 Holberg Prize Laureate

Reconnecting kidney plumbing, the zebrafish way

Biologically inspired event camera for accurate passive vibration measurement

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis of the terminal ileum identifies BCMA as a therapeutic target in IgA nephropathy

Muscle-healing 'Ally' turns 'Enemy': A novel immune cell subset that controls muscle regeneration and ossification in FOP

Waterpipe smoking can cause carbon monoxide poisoning even after brief use, during outdoor smoking, or through indoor secondhand exposure

Impact of Japan's indoor smoke-free laws on the prevalence of smoke-free establishments

New study fills research gap in food safety to better protect pregnant people from Listeria

[Press-News.org] Study suggests whole diet approach to lower CV risk has more evidence than low-fat diets
Mediterranean-style diets most successful, reports The American Journal of Medicine