Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
B
ioactive
compounds in berries can reduce high blood
pressure
January 16, 2011--Eating blueberries can guard
against high blood pressure, according to
new research by the University of East
Anglia and Harvard University.
High blood pressure – or hypertension – is
one of the major cardiovascular diseases
worldwide.
It leads to stroke and heart
disease and costs more than $300 billion
each year.
Around a quarter of the adult
population is affected globally – including
10 million people in the UK and one in three
US adults.
Published next month in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
the new findings show that bioactive
compounds in blueberries called anthocyanins
offer protection against hypertension.
Compared with those who do not eat
blueberries, those eating at least one
serving a week reduce their risk of
developing the condition by 10 per cent.
Anthocyanins belong to the bioactive family
of compounds called flavonoids and are found
in high amounts in blackcurrants,
raspberries, aubergines, blood orange juice
and blueberries.
Other flavonoids are found
in many fruits, vegetables, grains and
herbs. The flavonoids present in tea, fruit
juice, red wine and dark chocolate are
already known to reduce the risk of
cardiovascular disease.
This is the first large study to investigate
the effect of different flavonoids on
hypertension.
The team of UEA and Harvard scientists
studied 134,000 women and 47,000 men from
the Harvard established cohorts, the Nurses’
Health Study and the Health Professionals
Follow-up Study over a period of 14 years.
None of the participants had hypertension at
the start of the study. Subjects were asked
to complete health questionnaires every two
years and their dietary intake was assessed
every four years. Incidence of newly
diagnosed hypertension during the 14-year
period was then related to consumption of
various different flavonoids.
During the study, 35,000 participants
developed hypertension. Dietary information
identified tea as the main contributor of
flavonoids, with apples, orange juice,
blueberries, red wine, and strawberries also
providing important amounts.
When the
researchers looked at the relation between
individual subclasses of flavonoids and
hypertension, they found that participants
consuming the highest amounts of
anthocyanins (found mainly in blueberries
and strawberries in this US-based
population) were eight per cent less likely
to be diagnosed with hypertension than those
consuming the lowest amounts.
The effect was
even stronger in participants under 60.
The effect was strongest for blueberry
rather than strawberry consumption. Compared
to people who ate no blueberries, those
eating at least one serving of blueberries
per week were 10 per cent less likely to
become hypertensive.
“Our findings are exciting and suggest that
an achievable dietary intake of anthocyanins
may contribute to the prevention of
hypertension,” said lead author Prof Aedin
Cassidy of the Department of Nutrition at
UEA’s Medical School.
“Anthocyanins are readily incorporated into
the diet as they are present in many
commonly consumed foods. Blueberries were
the richest source in this particular study
as they are frequently consumed in the US.
Other rich sources of anthocyanins in the UK
include blackcurrants, blood oranges,
aubergines and raspberries.”
The next stage of the research will be to
conduct randomised controlled trials with
different dietary sources of anthocyanins to
define the optimal dose and sources for
hypertension prevention.
This will enable
the development of targeted public health
recommendations on how to reduce blood
pressure.
‘Habitual intake of flavonoid subclasses and
incident hypertension in adults’ by
A Cassidy (UEA), E O’Reilly (Harvard), Colin
Kay (UEA), L Sampson (Harvard), M Franz
(Harvard), J Forman (Harvard), G Curhan
(Harvard), and E Rimm (Harvard) will be
published in the February 2011 edition of
the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.