-Alexandra Metzler
A new study found that a diet high Mediterranean food (fruits,
vegetables, fish and unrefined foods) is linked to a lower risk of heart attack
and stroke in people who have heart disease.
It
can help your bones, keep your brain young, help you live longer, manage
your weight better and lower your risk of cancer and cardiovascular
diseases.
The
current study examined more than 15,000 people in 39 countries around the
world, all with heart disease and an average age of 67. Researchers asked about
their diet, including how many times a week they consumed servings from food
groups such as meat, fish, dairy, whole grains or refined grains, vegetables,
fruit, desserts, sweets, sugary drinks, deep-fried foods and alcohol.
Participants were given a "Mediterranean diet score," based on
consumption of healthy foods, or a "Western diet score," based on
consumption of unhealthy foods.
The
researchers followed up about four years later to compare how many participants
from each diet group had experienced a major adverse cardiovascular event, such
as heart attack, stroke or death.
They
found that for every 100 people who ate the highest amount of healthy Mediterranean
foods, there were three fewer heart attacks, strokes or deaths compared with
100 people who ate the least amount of healthy foods.
After
adjusting for other factors that might affect the results, such as smoking and
exercise, the study also found that the risk of heart attacks, strokes or death
from heart disease was reduced by about one-third for those who follow a
Mediterranean diet, said study author Ralph Stewart of Auckland City Hospital
and the University of Auckland in New Zealand.
Registered
dietitian Lisa Drayer, who was not involved in the study, agrees that it's
important to focus on eating healthy foods rather than avoiding unhealthy ones.
"We
all need to eat to live," she said. "If you want to break other bad
habits, you cut them out of your life: You cut cigarettes, you cut out drugs.
But when it comes to food, you can't not eat. It's just as important, if not
more important, for everyone to know what they should eat as opposed to what
they should steer clear of. Adding certain foods on a regular basis is more
achievable as opposed to stripping your diet of everything you like."
She
recommends including foods from the Mediterranean diet, such as salmon, fruits,
vegetables, whole grains and even a glass of wine, to keep our hearts healthy.
"The
diet has proven itself, and it behooves every one of us to eat more fish on a
regular basis, to have half of our plate filled with produce and to enjoy the
occasional glass of wine," she said. "And the more consistent you are
with this type of diet, the more impact it has on your health."
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