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New
study links Western diet to heart, health risks

But
it also found that diet soda doesnt protect against metabolic
syndrome
A
Western diet heavy in meat, fried foods and refined
grains puts people at higher risk of developing metabolic syndrome,
the collection of risk factors for heart problems, stroke and type
2 diabetes, a new study found.
The findings confirmed previous research with one interesting twist:
Drinking diet soda wont change the health-risk equation (surprisingly,
it ups the risk, too), although consuming more dairy might protect
you. A whopping 60.5 percent of the study participants either had
metabolic syndrome at the start of the study or developed it during
nine years of follow-up.
This is a red-alert wake-up call, said Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum,
director of Women and Heart Disease at Lenox Hill Hospital in New
York City, who was not involved with the study. I love that
they call this a Western diet. Its the perspective that we,
as Americans, cannot eat any worse.
The findings were published in the Jan. 22 issue of Circulation.
A person is thought to have metabolic syndrome if he or she has
three or more of the following cardiovascular risk factors: large
waist circumference, high blood pressure, high fasting glucose levels,
low HDL (good) cholesterol levels and high triglycerides.
According to U.S. government data collected between 1988 and 1994,
24 percent of adult Americans (47 million people) had metabolic
syndrome. That number is probably higher now, the study authors
stated. Although obesity and physical inactivity underlie most cases
of metabolic syndrome, the role of diet is still not well understood.
The authors of the new study relied on food frequency
questionnaires that had been filled out by almost 10,000 people
participating in the government-sponsored Atherosclerosis Risk in
Communities study. The questionnaire included 66 items related to
food consumption. Participants dietary preferences were categorized
as either Western-pattern or prudent-pattern,
depending on the overall responses.
The Western diet consisted of more refined grains, processed meat,
fried food, red meat, eggs and soda, and less fish, fruit, vegetables
and whole grains.
The prudent diet was heavy on cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli
and cabbage; carotenoid vegetables (carrots, pumpkins); fruit; fish
and seafood; poultry; whole grains; and low-fat dairy. The association
involving metabolic syndrome with certain specific food items --
such as fried foods, regular and diet soda, fruit drinks, nuts and
coffee -- was also explored.
People with the highest scores in the Western-pattern
diet had an 18 percent increased risk of developing metabolic syndrome,
compared with those with the lowest scores in this group.
Individuals with the highest consumption of meat had a 26 percent
greater risk of developing metabolic syndrome, compared with those
who ate the least amount of meat. Hamburgers, hot dogs and processed
meats seemed to accelerate the effect. On the other hand, eating
dairy was found to be protective: Individuals consuming the most
dairy had a 13 percent lower risk of developing metabolic syndrome,
compared to those who consumed the least.
Fried foods -- i.e., fast foods -- and diet soda were also associated
with metabolic syndrome, while sweetened beverages -- soda and fruit
drinks -- as well as coffee and nuts were not.
The diet soda findings echo those from a previous trial, the study
authors said.
The first time this came up, we didnt believe it,
Steinbaum said. Take two, and its now part of another
large study.
We did not expect to find that, added study co-author
Lyn Steffen, an associate professor of epidemiology at the University
of Minnesota School of Public Health. I dont know why
that is, but I think there is some basic science under way now looking
at diet soda and just what it does to promote these metabolic abnormalities.
The message hasnt changed, Steffen added. People
should eat according to the dietary guidelines for Americans, which
is a diet rich in plant foods. I dont oppose meat, but they
should consume red and processed meat once or twice a week, not
once or twice a day.
(HealthDay News)
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