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Johns Hopkins Medicine
Office of Corporate Communications
Media Contact: David March or John Sales
410-955-1534 office; 410-598-7056 cellular; dmarch1@jhmi.edu
November 15, 2005

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HEALTHY DIETS RICH IN PROTEIN AND GOOD FAT, AND LOWER IN CARBS LINKED TO BETTER HEART HEALTH

A healthy diet that replaces some carbohydrates with either protein or monounsaturated fat can substantially reduce blood pressure and cholesterol levels, resulting in a substantial reduction in overall risk of heart disease, according to government-funded studies by researchers at Johns Hopkins and elsewhere.

The Hopkins team found that shifting about 10 percent of calories from carbohydrate to either protein-rich foods, mostly from plant sources, or to monounsaturated fats, contained in olive and canola oil, provided a major benefit to the heart.

"Our study provides strong evidence that replacing some carbohydrate with either protein or monounsaturated fat has important health benefits," says internist Lawrence Appel, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of medicine at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and lead author of the study. "There is already agreement that reducing saturated fat lowers risk for heart disease, but the question of which macronutrient to emphasize has been controversial."

Appel makes clear that his study does not support extremely high-saturated-fat, low-carbohydrate diets such as the Atkins diet, which he says is not a healthy diet plan.

The study, called the Optimal Macronutrient Intake Trial to Prevent Heart Disease (OmniHeart), evaluated three healthy diets that differed mainly in the amount of macronutrients - protein, fat and carbohydrate - that provide calories used for energy in the body. All three diets were low in saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium, and rich in fruits, vegetables, fiber, potassium and other minerals. However, one diet was a traditional healthy diet, rich in carbohydrate, while in the other two diets approximately 10 percent of its calories from carbohydrate were replaced with either monounsaturated fat or protein. In the protein-rich diet, about half came from plants.

"All three diets reduced overall heart disease risk, lowering blood pressure and improving cholesterol levels," says Appel. "But the protein and monounsaturated fat diets had an edge over the carbohydrate-rich diet."

The Hopkins findings from OmniHeart, to be presented Nov. 15 at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2005 and published simultaneously in the Journal of the American Medical Association, underscore the significant benefits from making dietary changes, the researchers say.

Overall, the protein-rich diet, derived from plant and animal sources, decreased cardiovascular disease risk by 21 percent. "Many people equate protein with meat, but it is not the only source of protein," says study co-author Phyllis McCarron, M.S., R.D., a dietitian at Hopkins. "Excellent plant sources of protein are beans, nuts, seeds and certain grains."

The monounsaturated fat diet, enriched with olive and canola oils, as well as various nuts and seeds, decreased risk by almost 20 percent.

The carbohydrate-rich diet used in the study decreased risk by roughly 16 percent. The carbohydrate-rich diet is similar to the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension, or DASH diet, which Appel helped develop in 1997.

For the current study, which lasted about three years, researchers enlisted 164 generally healthy adults, both men and women ages 30 and over. "Because of the huge risk of stroke and heart attack in African Americans, the results are particularly applicable to this group, who made up roughly 55 percent of study participants," says study co-author Jeanne Charleston, R.N., a research associate at Hopkins’ Bloomberg School of Public Health. Charleston adds that all participants either had high blood pressure (almost 20 percent) or were on the verge of having high blood pressure.

For six-week intervals, participants ate all of their food - including breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks - from one of the three diets. After a two-to-four-week break, participants started the six-week feeding period over again, this time with a different diet. The process was repeated until all participants ate all three.

Researchers monitored each participant’s levels of blood pressure, cholesterol and triglycerides on each diet. These measurements were then factored into a standard mathematical model, called the Framingham risk equation, for estimating heart disease risk.

According to Appel, the OmniHeart study results reconfirm the powerful effects of a diet-based approach to improving someone’s cardiovascular risk profile, for blood pressure and cholesterol levels, and lowering their overall risk of heart disease. The OmniHeart Collaborative Research Group, which conducted this study, plans further research on the effects of carbohydrate on heart disease and its risk factors.

Funding for this study, conducted at Hopkins and Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston, Mass., was provided by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, and the National Center for Research Resources; both are members of the National Institutes of Health.

Besides Appel, McCarron and Charleston, other researchers involved in the study were Edgar Miller III, M.D., Ph.D.; and Thomas Erlinger, M.D., M.P.H., of Johns Hopkins; Frank Sacks, M.D.; Vincent Carey, Ph.D.; Janis Swain, M.S., R.D.; Paul Conlin, M.D.; Bernard Rosner, Ph.D.; Nancy Laranjo and Louise Bishop, R.D., of Harvard Medical School, in Boston, Mass.; and Eva Obarzanek, Ph.D. of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, in Bethesda, Md.

-- JHM --
 
Siis ruokavaliota manipuloimalla voidaan vähentää sydänkohtauksen riskiä ja vähentää verenpainetta ja kolesteroli tasoja?

Eikös tuo ole jo aika vanhaa tietoa? Vai ymmärsinko täysin väärin artikkelin pointin? Vai todistettiinko tuossa vasta tuo edellä mainittu fakta niillä testeillä?
 
Lapo sanoi:
Siis ruokavaliota manipuloimalla voidaan vähentää sydänkohtauksen riskiä ja vähentää verenpainetta ja kolesteroli tasoja?

Eikös tuo ole jo aika vanhaa tietoa? Vai ymmärsinko täysin väärin artikkelin pointin? Vai todistettiinko tuossa vasta tuo edellä mainittu fakta niillä testeillä?

Luitko edes juttua kokonaan?

Pointti oli siinä, että kun 10% energiansaannin hiilareista korvattiin proteiineilla tai hyvillä rasvoilla, päästiin vielä parempiin tuloksiin.
 
:D Jaahas, luin ehkä puoleenväliin. Sit meni hermot ja yritin kalastella lopusta pointit.
 
No, onhan tuo varmaan jo tietyissä piireissä jokseenkin "tiedetty", mutta mitä enemmän sitä jankataan ja todistetaan niin ehkä muutkin viimein uskovat.
 
Joo ei ole todellakaan tuolla Mansku 166:ssa tiedetty asia... Tai jos se on tiedetty, niin aika hauskaa, kun ottaa huomioon puljun antamat suositukset. Jos se taas ei ole tiedetty, niin aika hauskaa, kun ajatellaan että niiden tyyppien luulis ottavan asioista selvää ja suosittelevan sen perusteella...

p.s. Mansku 166:ssa sijaitsee KTL.
 
Tietääkö joku, mitä hh/prot/rasva suhteita tuossa käytettiin. Katoin jutun abstraktin, eikä siinäkään sanottu absoluuttista jakaumaa.

CONTEXT: Reduced intake of saturated fat is widely recommended for prevention of cardiovascular disease. The type of macronutrient that should replace saturated fat remains uncertain. OBJECTIVE: To compare the effects of 3 healthful diets, each with reduced saturated fat intake, on blood pressure and serum lipids. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Randomized, 3-period, crossover feeding study (April 2003 to June 2005) conducted in Baltimore, Md, and Boston, Mass. Participants were 164 adults with prehypertension or stage 1 hypertension. Each feeding period lasted 6 weeks and body weight was kept constant. INTERVENTIONS: A diet rich in carbohydrates; a diet rich in protein, about half from plant sources; and a diet rich in unsaturated fat, predominantly monounsaturated fat. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Systolic blood pressure and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. RESULTS: Blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and estimated coronary heart disease risk were lower on each diet compared with baseline. Compared with the carbohydrate diet, the protein diet further decreased mean systolic blood pressure by 1.4 mm Hg (P = .002) and by 3.5 mm Hg (P = .006) among those with hypertension and decreased low-density lipoprotein cholesterol by 3.3 mg/dL (0.09 mmol/L; P = .01), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol by 1.3 mg/dL (0.03 mmol/L; P = .02), and triglycerides by 15.7 mg/dL (0.18 mmol/L; P<.001). Compared with the carbohydrate diet, the unsaturated fat diet decreased systolic blood pressure by 1.3 mm Hg (P = .005) and by 2.9 mm Hg among those with hypertension (P = .02), had no significant effect on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, increased high-density lipoprotein cholesterol by 1.1 mg/dL (0.03 mmol/L; P = .03), and lowered triglycerides by 9.6 mg/dL (0.11 mmol/L; P = .02). Compared with the carbohydrate diet, estimated 10-year coronary heart disease risk was lower and similar on the protein and unsaturated fat diets. CONCLUSION: In the setting of a healthful diet, partial substitution of carbohydrate with either protein or monounsaturated fat can further lower blood pressure, improve lipid levels, and reduce estimated cardiovascular risk.Clinical Trials Registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00051350.
 
Hiilihydraattimäärän rajoittaminen tehostaa verenpainetta alentavan, nk. DASH-dieetin vaikutuksia, osoittaa Yhdysvalloissa tehty tutkimus.

Perinteinen DASH-ruokavalio (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) sisältää runsaasti kasviksia, marjoja ja hedelmiä sekä vähärasvaisia tai rasvattomia maitovalmisteita. Hiilihydraattien osuus ruokavalion kokonaisenergiasta on noin 55 prosenttia, rasvan 27 prosenttia ja proteiinin 18 prosenttia.

Yhdysvaltalaisessa tutkimuksessa osa ruokavalion hiilihydraateista korvattiin joko runsaasti proteiinia sisältävillä elintarvikkeilla tai tyydyttymättömillä rasvoilla, kuten oliiviöljyllä. Hiilihydraattien osuus ruokavaliosta tippui näin noin 45 prosenttiin.

Vähemmän hiilihydraatteja sisältävä ruokavalio tehosi kohonneeseen verenpaineeseen ja korkeisiin kolesteroliarvoihin jopa paremmin kuin perinteinen DASH-ruokavalio. Tutkijoiden mukaan ruokavalion vaikutus oli niin voimakas, että se saattaisi korvata jopa verenpainelääkkeet.

Tutkimukseen osallistui 164 yli 30-vuotiasta, kohonneesta verenpaineesta kärsivää henkilöä.

Tutkimuksen tulokset on raportoitu Journal of the American Medical Association -lehden tuoreimmassa numerossa. (Finfood)

Eli melko pitkälle perinteinen vs. Zone-tyyppinen.
 

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