A diet rich in antioxidants — especially from fruits and vegetables —
can reduce the risk of heart attack in women, researchers report. The new study
included more than 32,500 Swedish women, aged 49 to 83, who filled out a
questionnaire about their eating habits. During 10 years of follow up, more
than 1,100 of the women suffered a heart attack.
Women with the highest antioxidant levels had a 20 percent lower risk of
heart attack. These women consumed almost seven servings per day of fruits and
vegetables, which was nearly three times more than the 2.4 daily servings
consumed by those with the lowest antioxidant levels.
The study is published in the October issue of The American Journal
of Medicine. “Our study was the first to look at the effect of all dietary
antioxidants in relation to [heart attack],” lead investigator Alicja Wolk, of
the nutritional epidemiology division at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm,
Sweden, said in a journal news release.
There are numerous types of weight-loss diets, but those that emphasize
increased consumption of fruits and vegetables may be the most effective,
journal managing editor Pamela Powers Hannley wrote in an accompanying
commentary. “Yet only 14 percent of American adults and 9.5 percent of
adolescents eat five or more servings of fruits or vegetables a day,” she
noted.
Although the research found an association between increased consumption
of antioxidants and a lowered risk of heart attack, it did not prove the
existence of a cause-and-effect relationship.
health.com
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