Eating lots of white-fleshed fruit such as apples and pears
may significantly reduce the risk of stroke.
In
a new study, Dutch researchers set out to determine a possible link between
stroke risk and eating fruits and
vegetables of various colors. They took a look at self-reported
information from 20,069 people between ages 20 and 65 of what they ate over a
one-year period.All of the people had no previous diagnosed heart disease or stroke at
the start of the study.
During
the 10 years of follow-up, 233 people had strokes. The researchers say the risk
of stroke was 52% lower for people who ate a lot of white-fleshed fruits and
vegetables, compared to those who didn’t
Every Little Bit Helps
The
researchers found that each 25-gram daily increase of white fruits and
vegetables was associated with a 9% lower risk of stroke. To put that in
context, a single apple is about 120 grams.
“To
prevent stroke, it may be useful to consume considerable amounts of white
fruits and vegetables,” Linda M. Oude Griep, MSc, of Wageningen University in
the Netherlands, says in a news release.
She
says an apple a day “is an easy way to increase white fruits and vegetable
intake,” but because other fruits and vegetable color groups also protect
against chronic diseases, it’s important to eat a lot of different fruits and
vegetables.
Foods
in the white category also include bananas, cauliflower, chicory, and
cucumbers. Potatoes were classified as a starch.
Color Reflects Presence of Beneficial ‘Phytochemicals’
The
color of the edible portions of fruits and vegetables reflects the presence of
beneficial phytochemicals (plant compounds), such as carotenoids and
flavonoids.
In
the study, researchers divided fruits and vegetables into four color groups:
Green (dark leafy vegetables, cabbages, and lettuces), orange-yellow (mostly
citrus fruits), red-purple (mostly red vegetables), and white, of which 55%
were pears and apples.
Previous
studies on protective effects of fruits and vegetables have focused on the
food’s nutritional value and characteristics, such as the edible part of the
plant, the color, the botanical family, and its ability to provide
antioxidants.
The
researchers write that they believe their study is the first to examine fruit
and vegetable color groups in relation to stroke.
Still,
they say that more study is needed to confirm their findings. “It may be too
early for physicians to advise patients to change their dietary habits based on
these initial findings,” Oude Griep says.
Current Guidelines for Fruits and Vegetables
Currently,
the U.S. Preventive Health Services recommends that daily diets include vegetables
from five subgroups: dark green, red-orange, legume, starchy, and other
vegetables.
Heike
Wersching, MD, MSc, of the University of Munster in Germany, writes in an
accompanying editorial that even though the Dutch researchers’ study group was
“remarkably large,” their results should be interpreted with caution.
First,
Wersching says participants filled out questionnaires about what they ate,
meaning it relied on their memory, which is not always a totally reliable
method for gathering and interpreting data.
Also,
Wersching writes that it’s possible that the Dutch scientists’ findings could
be due to “a generally healthy lifestyle” of people who have diets rich in
fruits and vegetables.
Wersching
concludes, however, that if the findings of the Oude Griep group are
replicated, “the time for an ‘apple a day’ clinical trial has come.”
The
study and editorial are published in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart
Association.
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