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Advanced Mediterranean Diet » Alcohol

Archive for the ‘Alcohol’ Category

WHY Is the Mediterranean Diet So Healthy?

Saturday, September 24th, 2011

I’ve found that nearly everbody’s eyes glaze over if I try to explain how, physiologically, the Mediterranean diet promotes health and longevity.  Below are some of the boring details, for posterity’s sake, from my 2007 book, The Advanced Mediterranean Diet: Lose Weight, Feel Better, Live Longer.

Many of the nutrient-disease associations I mention below are just that: associations, linkages, not hard proof of a benefit.  Available studies are often contradictory.  For instance, there may be 10 observational studies linking whole grain consumption with reduced deaths from heart disease, while three other studies find no association, or even suggest  higher death rates. (I’m making these numbers up.)  If you want hard proof, you’ll have to wait.  A long time.  Such is nutrition science.  Take it all with a grain of salt. 

Also note that the studies supporting my claims below are nearly all done in non-diabetic populations.

Coronary Heart Disease

Coronary heart disease, also known as coronary artery disease, is the No.1 cause of death in the world. It’s responsible for 40% of deaths in the United States and other industrialized Western countries. The Mediterranean diet is particularly suited to mitigating the ravages of coronary heart disease. Mediterranean diet cardiac benefits may be related to its high content of monounsaturated fat (in olive oil), folate, and antioxidants.

The predominant source of fat in the traditional Mediterranean diet is olive oil, which is rich in monounsaturated fatty acids. High intake of olive oil reduces blood levels of triglycerides, total cholesterol, and LDL (”bad”) cholesterol. HDL or “good” cho-lesterol is unaffected. Olive oil tends to lower blood pressure in hypertensive people. Monounsaturated fatty acids reduce cardiovascular risk substantially, particularly when they replace simple sugars and easily digestible starches. Monounsaturated fatty acids and olive oil may also reduce breast cancer risk. The cardioprotective (good for the heart) and cancer-reducing effects of olive oil may be partially explained by the oil’s polyphenolic compounds.
    
Nuts are another good source of monounsaturated fatty acids and polyunsaturated fatty acids, including some omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Nuts have been proven to be cardioprotective. They lower LDL and total cholesterol levels, while providing substantial fiber and numerous micronutrients, such as vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, and folic acid. Compared with those who never or rarely eat nuts, people who eat nuts five or more times per week have 30 to 50% less risk of a fatal heart attack. Lesser amounts of nuts are also cardioprotective, perhaps by reducing lethal heart rhythm dis-turbances. 
    
Another key component of the Mediterranean diet is fish. Fish are excellent sources of protein and are low in cholesterol. Fatty, cold-water fish are particularly good for us because of their omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids: eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexanaenoic acid (DHA). The other important omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid is alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), available in certain plants. Our bodies can convert ALA into EPA and DHA, but not very efficiently. Fish oil supplements, which are rich in EPA, lead to lower total cholesterol and triglyce-ride levels. Fish oil supplements have several properties that fight atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). In people who have already had a heart attack, the omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids have proven to dramatically reduce cardiac deaths, especially sudden death, and nonfatal heart attacks. So omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids are “cardioprotective.”

The first sign of underlying coronary heart disease in many people is simply sudden death from a heart attack (myocardial infarction) or heart rhythm disturbance. These unfortunate souls had hearts that were ticking time bombs. I have little doubt that a significant number of such deaths can be prevented by adequate intake of cold-water fatty fish. As a substitute for fish, fish oil supplements might be just at beneficial. The American Heart Association also recommends fish twice weekly for the general population, or fish oil supplements if whole fish isn’t feasible. Compared with fish oil capsules, whole fish are loaded with vitamins, minerals, and protein. The richest fish sources of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids are albacore (white) tuna, salmon, sar-dines, trout, sea bass, sword-fish, herring, mackerel, anchovy, halibut, and pompano.
    
Cardioprotective omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (mainly ALA) are also provided by plants, such as nuts and seeds, legumes, and vegetables. Rich sources of ALA include walnuts, butternuts, soy-beans, flaxseed, almonds, leeks, purslane, pinto beans, and wheat germ. Purslane is also one of the few plant sources of EPA. Several oils are also very high in ALA: flaxseed, canola, and soybean. Look for them in salad dressings, or try cooking with them.

Macular Degeneration

Omega-3 fatty acid and fish consumption may also be “eye-protective.” Eating fish one to three times per week apparently helps prevent age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of blindness in people over 50 in the United States. While AMD has a significant hereditary component, onset and progression of AMD are affected by diet and lifestyle choices. For instance, smoking cigarettes definitely increases your risk of developing AMD. Other foods associated with lower risk of AMD are dark green leafy vegetables, orange and yellow vegetables and fruits: spinach, kale, collard greens, yellow corn, broccoli, sweet potatoes, squash, orange bell peppers, oranges, mangoes, apricots, peaches, honeydew melon, and papaya. Two unifying phytochemicals in this food list are lutein and zeaxanthin, which are also found in red grapes, kiwi fruit, lima beans, green beans, and green bell peppers. Increasing your intake of these foods as part of the Advanced Mediterranean Diet may well help preserve your vision as you age.      
    
Alzheimer’s Dementia
    
Another exciting potential benefit of fish consumption is prevention or delay of Alzheimer’s dementia. Several recent epidemiologic studies have suggested that intake of fish once or twice per week significantly reduces the risk of Alzheimer’s. Types of fish eaten were not specified. No one knows if fish oil capsules are equivalent. For now, I’m sticking with fatty cold-water fish, which I call my “brain food.”
    
Vitamin E supplements may slow the progression of established Alzheimer’s disease; clinical studies show either modest slowing of progression or no benefit. As a way to prevent Alzheimer’s, however, vitamin E supplements have been disappointing. On the other hand, high dietary vitamin E is associated with reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s. Good sources of vitamin E include vegetable oils (especially sunflower and soybean), sunflower seeds, nuts, shrimp, fruits, and certain vegetables: sweet potatoes, asparagus, beans, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrots, okra, green peas, sweet peppers, spinach, and tomatoes. All of these are on your new diet. 

Wine

For centuries, the healthier populations in the Mediterranean region have enjoyed wine in light to moderate amounts, usually with meals. Epidemiologic studies there and in other parts of the world have associated reasonable alcohol consumption with prolonged lifespan, reduced coronary artery disease, diminished Alzheimer’s and other dementias, and possibly fewer strokes. Alcohol tends to increase HDL cholesterol, have an antiplatelet effect, and may reduce C-reactive protein, a marker of arterial inflammation. These effects would tend to reduce cardiovascular disease. Wine taken with meals provides antioxidant phytochemicals (polyphenols, procyanidins) which may protect against atherosclerosis and some cancers. 

What’s a “reasonable” amount of alcohol? An old medical school joke is that a “heavy drinker” is anyone who drinks more than the doctor does. Light to moderate alcohol consumption is generally consi-dered to be one or fewer drinks per day for a woman, two or fewer drinks per day for a man. One drink is 5 ounces of wine, 12 ounces of beer, or 1.5 ounces of 80 proof distilled spirits (e.g., vodka, whiskey, gin). The optimal health-promoting type of alcohol is unclear. I tend to favor wine, a time-honored component of the Mediterranean diet. Red wine in particular is a rich source of resveratrol, which is thought to be a major contributor to the cardioprotective benefits associated with light to moderate alcohol consumption. Grape juice may be just as good—it’s too soon to tell.
    
I have no intention of overselling the benefits of alcohol. If you are considering habitual alcohol as a food, be aware that the health benefits are still somewhat debatable. Consumption of three or more alcoholic drinks per day is clearly associated with a higher risk of breast cancer in women. Even one or two drinks daily may slightly increase the risk. Folic acid supplementation might mitigate the risk. If you are a woman and breast cancer runs in your family, strongly consider abstinence. Be cautious if there are alcoholics in your family; you may have inherited the predisposition. If you take any medications or have chronic medical conditions, check with your personal physician first. For those drinking above light to mod-erate levels, alcohol is clearly perilous. Higher dosages can cause hypertension, liver disease, heart failure, certain cancers, and other medical problems. And psychosocial problems. And legal problems. And death. Heavy drinkers have higher rates of violent and accidental death. Alcoholism is often fatal. You should not drink alcohol if you:
            ■  have a history of alcohol abuse
                or alcoholism
            ■  have liver or pancreas disease
            ■  are pregnant or trying to become
                pregnant
            ■  may have the need to operate
                dangerous equipment or machinery,
                such as an automobile, while under
                the influence of alcohol
            ■  have a demonstrated inability to
                limit yourself to acceptable
                intake levels
            ■  have personal prohibitions due
                to religious, ethical, or other
                reasons. 
    
Cancer

Do you ever worry about cancer? You should. It’s the second leading cause of death. Over 500,000 people die from cancer each year in the United States. One third of people in the United States will develop cancer. Twenty percent of us will die from cancer. About half the deaths are from cancer of the lung, breast, and colon/rectum. Are you worried yet?

According to the American Cancer Society, one third of all cancer deaths can be attributed to diet and inadequate physical activity. So we have some control over our risk of developing cancer. High consumption of fruits and vegetables seems to protect against cancer of the lung, stomach, colon, rectum, oral cavity, and esophagus, although other studies dispute the protective linkage. Data on other cancers is limited or inconsistent. If you typically eat little or no fruits and vegetables, you can start today to cut your cancer risk by up to one half. Five servings of fresh fruits and vegetables a day seems to be the protective dose against cancer. Make it a life-long habit. The benefits accrue over time. Fruits and vegetables contain numerous phytochemicals thought to improve or maintain health, such as carotenoids (e.g., lycopene), lignans, phytosterols, sulfides, isothyocyanates, phenolic compounds (including flavonoids, resveratrol, phytoestrogens, antho-cyanins, and tannins), protease inhibitors, capsaicin, vitamins, and minerals. 
   
In addition to cancer prevention properties, fruits and vegetables provide fiber, which is the part of plants resistant to digestion by our enzymes. The other source of fiber is grain products, especially whole grains. Liberal intake of fiber helps prevent constipation, diverticular disease, hemorrhoids, irritable bowel syndrome, and perhaps colon polyps. Soluble fiber helps control blood sugar levels in diabetics. It also reduces LDL cholesterol levels, thereby reducing risks of coronary heart disease. Whether or not related to fiber, high fruit and vegetable intake may reduce the risks of coronary heart disease and stroke. Legume consumption in particular has been associated with a 10 to 20% lower risk of coronary heart disease, with the effective dose being around four servings per week. 

Fiber and Whole Grains

Processed, refined grain products have much less fiber than do whole grains. For instance, white all-purpose enriched flour has only about one fourth the fiber of whole wheat flour. The milling process removes the bran, germ, and husk (chaff), leaving only the endosperm as the refined product, flour. Endosperm is mostly starch and 10–15% protein. Many nutrients are lost during processing. The germ is particularly rich in vitamins (especially B vitamins), polyunsaturated fatty acids, antioxidants, trace minerals, and phytochemicals. Phytochemicals protect us against certain chronic diseases. Bran is high in fiber and nutrients: B vitamins, iron, magnesium, copper, and zinc, to name a few. Enriched grain products are refined grains that have had some, but certainly not all, nutrients added back, typically iron, thiamin, niacin, riboflavin, and folate. Why not just eat the whole grain? Whole grain products retain nearly all the nutrients found in the original grain. Hence, they are more nutritious than refined and enriched grain products.
    
Liberal intake of high-fiber whole grain foods, as contrasted with refined grains, is linked to lower risk of death and lower incidence of coronary heart disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus. For existing diabetics, whole grain consumption can help im-prove blood sugar levels. Three servings of whole grains per day cut the risk of coronary heart disease by about 25 percent compared with those who rarely eat whole grains. Regular consumption of whole grains may also substantially reduce the risk of sev-eral forms of cancer.

Average adult fiber intake in the United States is 12 to 15 grams daily. Expert nutrition panels and the American Heart Association recommend 25 to 30 grams daily from whole grains, fruits, and vegetables.

The health benefits of the Mediterranean diet likely spring from synergy among multiple Mediteranean diet components, rather than from a single food group or one or a few food items. 

Steve Parker, M.D.

We Get It Already: Alcohol Consumption Linked to Lower Rates of Death and Heart Attack

Monday, May 16th, 2011

Canadian and U.S. researchers report that moderate alcohol consumption seems to reduce 1) the incidence of coronary heart disease, 2) deaths from coronary heart disease, and 3) deaths from all causes.  Reduction of death from all causes is a good counter-argument to those who say alcohol is too dangerous because of deaths from drunk driving, alcoholic cirrhosis, and alcohol-related cancers such as many in the esophagus. 

Remember, we’re talking here about low to moderate consumption: one drink a day or less for women, two drinks or less a day for men.  That’s a max of 12.5 alcohol for women, 25 g for men.  No doubt, alcohol can be extremely dangerous, even lethal.  I deal with that in my patients almost every day.  Some people should never drink alcohol.

The recent meta-analysis in the British Medical Journal, which the authors say is the most comprehensive ever done, reviewed all pertinent studies done between 1950 and 2009, finally including 84 of the best studies on this issue.  Thirty-one of these looked at deaths from all causes.

Compared with non-drinkers, drinkers had a 25% lower risk of developing coronary heart disease (CHD) and death from CHD.  CHD is the leading cause of death in develop societies.

Stroke is also considered a cardiovascular disease.  Overall, alcohol is not linked to stroke incidence or death from stroke.  The researchers did see strong trends toward fewer ischemic strokes and more hemorrhagic strokes (bleeding in the brain) in the drinkers.  So the net effect was zero. 

ResearchBlogging.orgCompared with non-drinkers, the lowest risk of death from any cause was seen in those consuming 2.5 to 14.9 g per day (one drink or less per day), whose risk was 17% lower.  On the other hand, heavy drinkers (>60 g/day) had 30% higher risk of death. 

In case you’re wondering, the authors didn’t try to compare the effects of beer versus wine versus distilled spirits. 

On a related note, scientists at the Medical University of South Carolina found that middle-aged people who took up the alcohol habit had a lower risk of stroke and heart attack.  Wine seemed to be more effective than other alcohol types.  They found no differences in overall death rates between new drinkers persistent non-drinkers, perhaps because the study lasted only four years and they were following only 442 new drinkers.  

This doesn’t prove that judicious alcohol consumption prevents heart attacks, cardiac deaths, and overall deaths.  But it’s kinda lookin’ that way.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Reference: Ronksley PE, Brien SE, Turner BJ, Mukamal KJ, & Ghali WA (2011). Association of alcohol consumption with selected cardiovascular disease outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 342 PMID: 21343207

Chronic Alcohol May Impair Vision in Diabetics

Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

MedPage Today recently reported that long-term consumption of alcohol may impair vision in diabetics. Drinkers performed less well on vision chart tests than non-drinkers. It’s not a diabetic retinopathy issue.

Beer and distilled spirits were riskier than wine.

The MedPage Today article didn’t comment on the potential health benefits of alcohol consumption. You can bet I’ll keep an eye on this.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Red Wine Improves Circulation

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Red wine’s beneficial health effects may be related to improved circulation, according to a recent study by Israeli researchers.

Red wine is a time-honored component of the healthy Mediterranean diet.  Consumption is associated with longer lifespan and less cardiovascular disease such as heart attacks. 

Israeli investigators had 14 young healthy volunteers drink 250 cc of red wine daily for 21 days, while monitoring markers of circulatory function.  Endothelial progenitor cells may be particularly important in maintenance, repair, and formation of the arterial circulatory system.

Here’s their conclusion:

The results of the present study indicate that red wine exerts its effect through the up-regulation of CXCR4 expression and activation of the SDF1/CXCR4/Pi3K/Akt/eNOS signaling pathway, which results in increased [endothelial progenitor cell] migration and proliferation and decreased extent of apoptosis. Our findings suggest that these effects could be linked to the mechanism of cardiovascular protection that is associated with the regular consumption of red wine.

I’m not going to tell you I understand all that.  Don’t feel bad if you don’t, either. 

My point is to illustrate one way that Science makes progress.  An observant person notices, “Hey, people who drink judicious amounts of red wine seem to live longer and have fewer heart attacks.  I wonder how that works.”  Perhaps a plausible mechanism is identified.  That might lead to isolation of a specific component in red wine that yields the benefit.  Then that component is produced and disseminated, leading to the health benefits, without the risks of alcohol consumption.

It’s an expensive, time-consuming enterprise with many blind alleys.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Reference:  Hamed, Saher, et al.  Red wine consumption improves the in vitro migration of endothelial progenitor cells in young, healthy individuals.  American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, April 14, 2010.    doi:10.3945/ajcn.2009.28408

Alcohol Linked to Lower Risk of Type 2 Diabetes

Thursday, November 12th, 2009
Beautiful woman smiling as she is wine tasting on a summer day.

Judicious alcohol consumption is linked to lower risk of developing type 2 diabetes: 40% lower risk in women, 13% lower in men. 

Why does this matter? 

  • 24 million in the U.S. have diabetes.  Another 57 million have pre-diabetes, a condition that increases your risk for diabetes.

  • 23% of U.S. adults over 60 have diabetes. 

The latest issue of Diabetes Care reports the comparison of lifetime abstainers with alcohol drinkers.  The protective “dose” of alcohol is 22–24 grams a day.  I’ll leave it to you to figure out how much alcohol that is.  Prior studies looking at overall health benefits of alcohol indicate that judicious consumption is ≤ one drink daily, on average,  for women, and  ≤ 2 drinks a day for men.

Of course, many people shouldn’t drink any alcohol.  

Steve Parker, M.D.  

Reference:  Baliunas, D., et al.  Alcohol as a risk factor for type 2 diabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysisDiabetes Care, 32 (2009): 2,123-2,132.

Do Grape Products Other Than Wine Affect Heart Disease Risk?

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Grape products favorably affect four risk factors for heart disease, according to a scientific review published last year.

The “French Paradox” refers to the fact that certain regions of France have low levels of heart disease despite high consumption of saturated fats that supposedly cause heart disease.  Some have explained away the paradox by noting high consumption of red wine in those areas, which could counteract the adverse effects of saturated fats.  Others have used the paradox to indict the Diet-Heart Hypothesis itself

Wine, especially red wine, is an integral part of the Ketogenic Mediterranean Diet.  However, many people just don’t like wine, and others shouldn’t be drinking it.  Grapes and grape juice have too many carbohydrates for a very low-carb diet like the KMD.  So, I’ve been wondering if grape products other than wine might have the healthy effects of wine.

The reference article below reviewed grape product trials published over the previous 13 years: 34 studies in animals, 41 in humans.  Non-wine grape products included grape juice, grape seed, grape skin, and polyphenol-rich extracts.  The authors conclude that grape products have the following beneficial effects on cardiovascular risk factors:

  • lower blood pressure, mainly due to release of nitric oxide from cells lining the arteries
  • reduced levels of total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol (”bad cholesterol”), and trigylcerides, especially if these values are high at baseline
  • reduced development of early-stage atherosclerosis (less LDL oxidation and plaque formation)
  • improved antioxidant status

Here are some grape product “fun facts” from the article:

  • healthy effects are primarily attributed to polyphenols, which are strong antioxidants that disable free radicals and chelate metals
  • major grape polyphenols are anthocyanins in red grapes, flavon-3-ols in white grapes
  • red grapes have more total polyphenols than white grapes
  • the main polyphenols in wine are resveratrol, tannins, flavan-3-ols, flavan-3,4-diols, anthocyanins, flavonols, flavones, anthocyanins, and anthocyanidins
  • red wine has a much higher phenolic content than white wine

Unfortunately, the authors never make any specific recommendations for people wanting to substitute grape products for wine. 

But I bet if you went down to your local vitamin or health food store, you could find some grape extracts or other grape products to try.  Anyone on a very low-carb diet would want to be sure the grape product wouldn’t supply more than 3-4 grams of digestible carbohydrate per day.  For those not on such a diet, purple grape juice like Welch’s—4 to 8 fl oz a day—is a good alternative to wine.  Welch’s has 42 g of carbohydrate per 8 fl oz.  

Or just eat 1-2 cups of grapes - red or purple grapes might be the healthiest. 

Steve Parker, M.D.

Disclaimer:  All matters regarding your health require supervision by a personal physician or other appropriate health professional familiar with your current health status.  Always consult your personal physician before making any dietary or exercise changes.

Reference:  Perez-Jimenez, Jara and Saura-Calixto, Fulgencio.  Grape products and cardiovascular disease risk factors.  Nutrition Research Reviews, 21 (2008): 158-173.

Alcohol Types Other Than Wine Increase Cancer Risk in Men

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Canadian researchers recently reported that Canadian men who are regular alcohol drinkers - on a daily or weekly basis - have a higher risk of cancer of the esophagus, stomach, colon, liver, lung, and prostate.  The more men drink, the greater the risk.

The investigators suspect that alcohol may be responsible for up to 5% of all invasive cancer deaths.  Their article abstract does not address the possibility that regular drinkers may live longer than non-drinkers despite increased risk of cancer. 

Readers of this blog will note that I am a bit of an advocate of alcohol consumption - for carefully selected people - for prolongation of life and reduction of cardiovascular disease.  I’m also on record as favoring wine over other alcoholic beverages for these potential benefits.

I happy to report that the Canadians did not find an association between wine consumption and cancer

Steve Parker, M.D.  

Reference:  Benedetti, Andrea, et al.  Lifetime consumption of alcoholic beverages and risk of 13 types of cancer in men:  results of a case-control study in MontrealCancer Detection and Prevention, 32 (2009): 352-362. 

Red Wine With Meaty Meals Possibly Healthier Than Wine and Meat Alone

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

Wine is time-honored component of the healthy Mediterranean diet and, traditionally, is consumed with meals.

For science and food geeks, Bix at the Fanatic Cook blog has a post outlining how red wine consumption with meals might be healthy: it reduces blood levels of cytotoxic lipid peroxidation products like malondialdehyde.

By no means is Fanatic Cook always this esoteric.  Check out some of the other topics there.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Which Components of the Mediterranean Diet Prolong Life?

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Researchers at Harvard and the University of Athens (Greece) report that the following specific components of the Mediterranean diet are associated with lower rates of death:

  • moderate ethanol (alcohol) consumption
  • low meat and meat product intake
  • high vegetable consumption
  • high fruit and nut consumption
  • high ratio of monounsaturated fat to saturated fat
  • high legume intake

Minimal, if any, contribution to mortality was noted with high cereal, low dairy, or high fish and seafood consumption. 

The researchers examined diet and mortality data from over 23,000 adult participants in the Greek portion of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and nutrition.  You’ll be hearing more about the EPIC study for many years.  Over an average follow-up of 8.5 years, 1,075 of participants died.  652 of these deaths were of participants in the lower half of Mediterranean diet adherence; 423 were in the upper half.

Alcohol intake in Greece is usually in the form of wine at mealtimes. 

The beneficial “high ratio of monounsaturated fat to saturated fat” stems from high consumption of olive oil and low intake of meat. 

It’s not clear if these findings apply to other nationalities or ethnic groups.  Other research papers have documented the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet in at least eight other countries over three continents. 

The researchers don’t reveal in this report the specific causes of death.  I expect those data, along with numbers on diabetes, stroke, and dementia, to be published in future articles, if not published already.  Prior Mediterranean diet studies indicate lower death rates from cardiovascular disease and cancer.   

Steve Parker, M.D.

Reference:  Trichopoulou, Antonia, et al.  Anatomy of health effects of the Mediterranean diet: Greek EPIC prospective cohort studyBritish Medical Journal, 338 (2009): b2337.  DOI: 10.1136/bmj.b2337.

Additional Information:  Childs, Dan.  Take it or leave it?  The truth about 8 mediterranean diet staples.  ABC News online, June 24, 2009.  Accessed June 25, 2009.

Update June 26, 2009:

Here’s a direct quote from the study at hand:

Among the presumed beneficial components of the Mediterranean diet score, high consumption of all but fish and seafood was inversely associated with mortality, although none of these associations was statistically significant.

“. . . none of these associations was statistically significant.”  So I can understand some skepticism about this journal article. The researchers had to use some very sophisticated statistical manipulation to come up with the “healthy components” list. I’m not saying that’s wrong. I will admit that the statistical analysis is beyond my comprehension, so I’m trusting the authors and peer-review process to be honest and effective. My college statistics course was too many years ago.

The take-home point for me is that the health benefits of the Mediterranean diet probably stem from an overall combination of multiple foods rather than any single component.

Steve Parker, M.D.

And remember to exercise regularly, maintain a healthy weight (BMI 18.5-25), keep your blood pressure under 140/90, and don’t smoke.

-Steve

New Study Confirms the Heart-Healthy Mediterranean Diet

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Major media outlets in the last 48 hours have reported a new Canadian study that confirms the heart-healthy characteristics of the Mediterranean diet.  Examples are Forbes.com (Review Confirms Links Between Diet, Heart Health, April 12, 2009), UPI.com (Vegetables, nuts, Med Diet good for heart, April 14, 2009), and the Wall Street Journal (Heart Health: Mediterranean Diet Good, Trans Fats Bad, April 13, 2009).

Canadian researchers sought to systematically evaluate the strength of the evidence supporting links between dietary factors and coronary heart disease.  Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the number one cause of death in Western societies.

It’s important to understand the two types of studies meta-analyzed by the Canadians.

Prospective cohort studies can be used to identify a dietary factor that may be associated with a disease or outcome.  For example, researchers could study the health of 20,000 people over the course of 10 years, giving them questionnaires to find out what foods they typically ate.  They might find after 10 years that the people who ate the most saturated fat tended to die earlier and had more heart attacks and strokes compared to the people who ate the least saturated fat.  This would establish an association between dietary saturated fat and premature death, heart attacks, and strokes.  It does not prove that saturated fats cause those outcomes, it’s just an association.

Randomized trials, often called randomized controlled trials (RCTs), typically take two groups of people and apply an intervention to one group but not the other.  The groups are followed over time to see if there is a difference in outcome.  For example, take another group of 20,000 people.  Randomly assign 10,000 of them to eat more-than-usual saturated fat.  The other 10,000 similar people serve as the control group, eating their usual amount of saturated fat.  Follow these 20,000 people over 10 years, then compare their health outcomes: death, heart attacks, strokes.  If the high-saturated-fat group has worse outcomes, you are much closer to proving that dietary saturated fat causes premature death, heart attacks, and strokes.

Methodology 

The scientists located and analyzed every English-language prospective cohort study (146 studies) or randomized trial (43) investigating food intake and coronary heart disease (CHD), from 1950 through June, 2007.  They wrote:

We used the Bradford Hill guidelines to derive a causation score based on four criteria (strength, consistency, temporality, and coherence) for each dietary exposure in cohort studies and examined for consistency with the findings of randomized trials.

The different dietary patterns evaluated in studies were noted.  The “Mediterranean” dietary pattern emphasizes a higher intake of vegetables, legumes, fruits, nuts, whole grains, cheese or yogurt, fish, and monounsaturated relative to saturated fatty acids.  The “prudent” dietary pattern is characterized by a high intake of vegetables, fruit, legumes whole grains, and fish and other seafood.  The “western” pattern is characterized by a high intake of processed meat, red meat, butter, high-fat dairy products, eggs, and refined grains.

Results

Strong evidence (four Bradford Hill criteria satisfied) supported protection against CHD with consumption of:

  • vegetables
  • nuts
  • monounsaturated fatty acids [prominent in olive oil, for example]
  • Mediterranean diet
  • prudent diet

Modertately strong evidence (three criteria satisfied) supported protection against CHD with consumption of:

  • fish
  • marine omega-3 fatty acids
  • folate
  • whole grains
  • dietary vitamins E and C (as opposed to vitamin supplements)
  • beta carotene
  • alcohol
  • fruit
  • fiber

Strong evidence supported the following as harmful dietary factors, in terms of CHD:

Researchers found insufficient evidence (two or less criteria) to support an association between CHD and:

  • total fat
  • saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids
  • eggs
  • meat
  • milk
  • vitamin supplements E and C
  • alpha-linolenic acid

Selected Comments of the Researchers  [my comments in brackets]

Cohort studies provide abundant evidence of an association with total mortality for many dietary exposures.  Randomized controlled trials corroborate these associations for the consumption of omega-3 fatty acids and a Mediterraneandiet because most of the other dietyary factors have not been evaluated to date.

Among the dietary exposures with strong evidence of causation from cohort studies, only a Mediterranean dietary pattern is related to CHD in randomized trials.  [The association is inverse: Higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet leads to lower rates of CHD.]

A wealth of epidemiologic studies have evaluated associations between dietary exposures and CHD.  The general consensus from the evidence currently available is that a reduced consumption of saturated and trans-fatty acids and a higher intake of fruits and vegetables, polyunsaturated fatty acids including omega-3 fatty acids, and whole grains are likely beneficial.  This is reflected in the revised Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005 from the US Departments of Health and Human Services and Agriculture.  However, little direct evidence from RCTs supports these recommendations.  [Emphasis added.]  In some cases, RCTs have not been conducted, and RCTs that have been conducted have generally not been adequately powered or have evaluated surrogate end points rather than clinical outcomes.

Single-nutrient RCTs have yet to evaluate whether reducing saturated fatty acid intake lowers the risk of CHD events.

More recently, the lack of benefit of diets of reduced total fat has been established [in women only? (reference below)], and the evidence supporting the adverse effect of trans-fatty acids on cholesterol levels and CHD has increased, which is reflected in our findings.  [This is the only mention of cholesterol in the report.]

My Comments

I wonder about vegetarian/vegan diets.  Have they been tested for efficacy against CHD?  What about Dr. Dean Ornish’s program?

Although not mentioned in the text of the article, Table 3 on page 664 shows that the positive association between CHD and high-glycemic index/load is much stonger in women than in men.  Relative risk for women on a high-glycemic index/load diet was 1.5 (95% confidence interval = 1.29-1.71), and for men the relative risk was 1.06 (95% confidence interval = 0.91-1.20).  I question whether the association for men is statistically significant. 

Why wasn’t there discussion of dietary cholesterol?  The public and physicians have been told for years that dietary cholesterol causes or aggravates coronary heart disease.  In a near-future post, I quote one expert stating that people at risk for coronary heart disease (aren’t we all?) should limit cholesterol to 200 mg/day.  Is there no evidence?

I’m a little surprised, but some of you won’t be, that the researchers found no clear association between CHD and saturated and total fat intake.  In traditional medical circles, these findings are considered sacrilegious!

Medical schools and cardiologists have been teaching for thirty or more years that they are related positively.  “Positively” means the more saturated and total fat in your diet, the more likely you are to develop atherosclerosis, which in the heart is coronary heart disease.  Dietary cholesterol is often thrown into the equation.  The is the dogmatic Diet-Heart Hypothesis.

Steve Parker, M.D.

References:

Mente, Andrew, et al.  A Systematic Review of the Evidence Supporting a Causal Link Between Dietary Factors and Coronary Heart DiseaseArchives of Internal Medicine, 169 (2009): 659-669.

van Dam, R.M., et al.  Dietary glycemic index in relation to metabolic risk factors and incidence of coronary heart disease: the Zutphen Elderly StudyEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 54  (2000): 726-731.

Howard, B.V., et al.  Low-fat dietary pattern and risk of cardiovascular disease: the Women’s Health Initiative Randomized Controlled Dietary Modification Trial.  Journal of the American Medical Association, 295 (2006): 655-666.

This is an April 16 update to my April 14 post which was based solely on the journal article abstract.  I have reviewed the full article. 


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