Sunday, March 11, 2018

Eating Fruit Daily Linked to Lower Cardiovascular Risk - Tufts University Health & Nutrition Letter Article


If you need more motivation to substitute an apple or a pear for that bag of chips or indulgent dessert, a new Chinese study might help you reach for the fruit bowl or bag of berries in the freezer. In the most comprehensive such research to date, following a half-million people for seven years, greater fruit consumption was associated with lower risk of heart attack and stroke. Consuming about 3.5 ounces of fruit daily was associated with about a one-third lower risk of death from cardiovascular causes. The study focused on fresh fruit, because that was what was available, but the findings should apply to other forms, such as frozen.

How much is 3.5 ounces of fruit? That’s roughly one cup of sliced fruit like apples or peaches, or one small whole fruit or 20 grapes. If you prefer berries, it's a little less than a full cup. In short, you don’t have to consume a whole orchard.

The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, was noteworthy because it focused on a population where fruit consumption is less common than in the US. Among the 512,891 adults, ages 30 to 79 years, recruited from 10 diverse localities in China, only 18% reported eating fresh fruit daily. Participants were initially free of cardiovascular disease and were not being treated for high blood pressure.
"The average level of fruit consumption in the Chinese population is very low," researchers noted, "and there is evidence that the association of fruit consumption with [reduced] disease risks may be particularly strong at the low end of the range of intake (i.e. fewer than two servings per day)." If potential heart benefits are greatest in going from eating little or no fruit to one or two daily servings - rather than adding more to an already fruit-heavy diet - this study would find it.


Indeed, both women and men who ate fresh fruit daily were 40% less likely to die of cardiovascular disease and 34% less likely to die of major coronary events than those eating no fruit. Daily fruit eaters were also at lower risk of dying from stroke. The more often participants consumed fruit, the lower the risk.

This article was adapted from this article from Tufts University. 
Eating Fruit Daily Linked to Lower Cardiovascular Risk - Tufts University Health & Nutrition Letter Article

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