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Low-fat dairy tied to lower blood
pressure
New York -
Middle-aged adults who favor skim milk and other low-fat dairy
foods may have lower blood pressure than others their age, a new study
suggests.
Researchers in Spain found that among
nearly 5,900 adults they followed over two years, those with the
highest intake of low-fat dairy products were about half as likely to
develop high blood pressure as those who consumed the fewest.
The apparent protective effect
remained when the researchers accounted for other factors in high
blood pressure risk -- including overall diet, exercise, body weight
and smoking.
Fattier dairy foods like whole milk
and ice cream, however, were not a blood pressure boon, according to
findings published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Though some past research has linked
low-fat dairy consumption to lower blood pressure, this is the first
to find the relationship among middle-aged adults. Previous studies
have focused on children and young adults, Dr. Alvaro Alonso, the lead
author of the new study, told Reuters Health.
The findings from these studies do
not prove that low-fat dairy foods have a direct benefit on blood
pressure, noted Alonso, who is currently with the Harvard School of
Public Health in Boston. But he said it at least seems that people who
want to prevent high blood pressure can include low-fat dairy foods in
their diets.
It's not completely clear why dairy
foods might help control blood pressure, but it does not appear to be
due to calcium alone. In the current study, only calcium from low-fat
dairy products was related to lower blood pressure risk, and past
research has failed to find a clear association between higher calcium
intake and lower blood pressure, Alonso said.
The study included 5,880 adults who
ranged in age from 20 to 90 and were free from high blood pressure and
cardiovascular disease at the start of the study. Participants
completed questionnaires on their diets and other health and lifestyle
factors, and the researchers followed up with them two years later to
see how many had developed high blood pressure.
Overall, 180 people developed the
condition during the study period. Those who had reported the highest
intake of low-fat dairy -- mostly in the form of skim and reduced-fat
milk -- were 54 percent less likely to develop high blood pressure
than those with the lowest intakes.
Milk, the study authors note,
provides certain proteins -- caseins and whey proteins -- that may act
in a manner similar to blood-pressure-lowering drugs called
angiotensin converting enzyme, or ACE, inhibitors. These proteins may
help explain the study results, they speculate.
As for why only low-fat dairy had
positive effects, it's "plausible," according to the researchers, that
the saturated fat in richer dairy foods neutralizes any blood pressure
benefits. --
Reuters
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