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When it comes to chocolate, order
dark, not white
New York -
Dark chocolate -- but not white chocolate - may help reduce blood
pressure and boost the body's ability to metabolize sugar from food,
according to the results of a small study.
Investigators from the University of
L'Aquila in Italy found that after eating only 100 grams, or 3.5
ounces, of dark chocolate every day for 15 days, 15 healthy people had
lower blood pressures and were more sensitive to insulin, an important
factor in metabolizing sugar.
In contrast, eating roughly the same
amount of white chocolate for the same period of time did not affect
either blood pressure or insulin sensitivity.
This is not the first study to
demonstrate potential health benefits of dark chocolate, which
contains high levels of a kind of antioxidant called flavonoids.
Research shows that flavonoids that can help maintain a healthy heart
and good circulation and reduce blood clotting, which can lead to
heart attacks and stroke.
Dr. Claudio Ferri and
co-investigators explained that flavonoids help the body by
neutralizing potentially cell-damaging substances known as oxygen-free
radicals, which are a normal byproduct of metabolism.
However, despite dark chocolate's
apparent benefits, Ferri urges caution when interpreting the results.
Dark chocolate contains antioxidants, but also a lot of fat and
calories, Ferri said, and people who want to add some chocolate to
their diet need to subtract an equivalent amount of calories by
cutting back on other foods, to avoid weight gain.
He added that each 100 grams of dark
chocolate contains roughly 500 calories.
Other research validates that when it
comes to chocolate, type does matter. One study found that eating milk
chocolate did little to raise antioxidant levels in the blood, perhaps
because milk interferes with the absorption of antioxidants from
chocolate.
Another study showed that elderly
people with high blood pressure experienced a drop in pressure after
eating dark chocolate bars, but not white chocolate, which contains no
flavonoids.
Ferri
and colleagues asked 7 men and 8 women, all healthy, to eat 100 grams
of dark chocolate or 90 grams of white chocolate every day for 15
days. The subjects consumed no chocolate for the next 7 days and then
switched to the other chocolate type for 15 days.
Ferri's
team found that after eating dark chocolate, participants' blood
pressure decreased, and they showed improvements in insulin
sensitivity, meaning they were better able to metabolize glucose
(sugar), according to the report in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition.
"The identification of healthy foods
and the understanding of how food components influence normal
physiology will help to improve the health of the population," Dr.
Cesar G. Fraga of the University of California, Davis, notes in an
accompanying editorial. --
Reuters
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