Kardea

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

From Heart Health Claims to Cardiovascular Health Optimizing Nutrition

Take a stroll through any grocery store, and you may become overwhelmed by the dizzying array of heart healthy products. Cereals, soups, super-fruit drinks, popcorn and chocolate, salad dressings, margarines and oils, yogurts and nutritional bars, pastas and many other food categories have products proclaiming their ability to lower cholesterol and blood pressure, fight inflammation and control blood sugar levels —all factors in the development of cardiovascular diseases. No food or specific nutrient rules in the quest for the healthiest. “Low in sodium,” “low in saturated fat,” “no cholesterol and no trans-fats,” “high in potassium or high antioxidants”, “with plant sterols”, “an excellent source of Omega-3’s ,” and “contains cholesterol lowering fiber” are only some of the pronouncements. Walk over to the vitamin aisle and you will find numerous supplements with similar associations to heart health: CoQ-10, Vitamin E, psyllium, niacin and red yeast rice are just a few.

Many consumers remain dubious. See full article at The Kardea Gourmet.

Kardea Nutrition for Natural Cholesterol Lowering

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, June 29, 2009

Mediterranean Diet Works As A Whole System

Researchers continue to find an association between the Mediterranean diet and increased longevity.

"Overall diet is more important than individual components, with emphasis on moderate—but not excessive—wine consumption, particularly during meals, preference for olive oil as the main added lipid, low consumption of meat, and high consumption of vegetables, fruits, and legumes," author Dr Dimitrios Trichopoulos (Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA).

The researchers examined data from healthy individuals in Greece who participated in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) trial.
The researchers looked at data from the Greek segment of EPIC, from over 23 000 healthy men and women aged 20 to 86 at enrollment. As is typical in the Greek population, many individuals were overweight or obese and many men were smokers. Most were moderately active.

This work confirms that it is not one single component of the Mediterranean diet that is driving reduced risk of mortality. "In order to promote longevity, people have to do several things at the same time. They just can't focus on one food—just eat blueberries or take a folic-acid pill. It's a whole lifestyle, whole diet approach for health promotion," say Dr. Teresa Fung of the Harvard School of Public Health.

Labels: , , ,