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Study
affirms ‘Mediterranean Diet’ improves Heart
Health
--Olive oil and nuts
boost insulin action, reduce heart disease
risks
Newswise, November 25, 2011 — A team
of Johns Hopkins researchers has uncovered
further evidence of the benefits of a
balanced diet that replaces white bread and
pasta carbohydrates with unsaturated fat
from avocados, olive oil and nuts — foods
typical of the so-called “Mediterranean
diet.”
In a report prepared for the
American Heart Association’s scientific
sessions in Orlando next week, the Johns
Hopkins investigators say swapping out
certain foods can improve heart health in
those at risk for cardiovascular disease,
even if the dietary changes aren’t coupled
with weight loss.
“The introduction of the right kind
of fat into a healthy diet is another
tool to reduce the risk of future heart
disease,” says Meghana Gadgil, M.D.,
M.P.H., a postdoctoral fellow in the
Division of General Internal Medicine at
the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine who will be presenting the
research.
Gadgil and her colleagues analyzed
data from the OmniHeart Trial, which studied
the cardiovascular effects of three
different balanced diets on 164 people with
mild hypertension but no diabetes.
The researchers compared the body’s
ability to regulate blood sugar and maintain
healthy insulin levels while on a
carbohydrate-rich diet, a protein-rich diet
and a diet rich in unsaturated fats. People
whose bodies fail to effectively use insulin
usually develop type 2 diabetes, which is a
major risk factor for heart disease.
The researchers found that a
generally balanced diet higher in
unsaturated fats such as those in avocados,
olive oil and nuts improves insulin use
significantly more than a diet high in
carbohydrates, particularly such refined
carbs as white bread and pasta. The
preferred diet is very similar to the
Mediterranean diet, inspired by the foods of
southern Italy and Greece and emphasizing
healthy fats, fruits and vegetables.
Each participant in the study was
fed each of the three diets for six weeks in
a row, with two to four weeks off in
between. Blood samples were collected after
fasting periods in weeks four and six of
each diet, and used to monitor insulin and
glucose levels. The study was designed to
keep participants at their starting weights.
“A lot of studies have looked at how the
body becomes better at using insulin when
you lose weight,” Gadgil says. “We kept the
weight stable so we could isolate the
effects of the macronutrients. What we found
is that you can begin to see a beneficial
impact on heart health even before weight
loss.”