Chocolate a Sweet Remedy for Many Ills?

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Chocolate a Sweet Remedy for Many Ills?

By Lisa Esposito
HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 29 (HealthDay News) — International researchers have uncovered even more healthy properties of flavanols — the antioxidants found in cocoa beans.

Eighteen chocolate-centered studies — including investigations of how cocoa might affect blood pressure, heart disease, painful nerve disorders and cancer risk — were to be presented Wednesday at the American Chemical Society’s annual meeting in San Diego.

Some caveats: Most of the studies have not yet been accepted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal, so those findings are preliminary. Many studies were also small in scope, with relatively few participants. And some were animal studies, and results might not translate to humans.

While larger, observational studies have shown possible health benefits from dark chocolate or cocoa, this new research begins to explore how those benefits occur, explained Dr. Gregg Fonarow, a professor of cardiology at the University of California, Los Angeles.

“The thing to keep in mind: All of these are very small studies,” Fonarow said. “But they are important steps in investigating the mechanisms by which chocolate or cocoa may have beneficial cardiovascular effects.”

Several of the studies suggested that cocoa might protect against inflammation.

“One of the presumed mechanisms by which cocoa or dark chocolate could be beneficial, or flavonoids in general, is through the mechanism of decreasing vascular inflammation,” part of the process leading to strokes and heart attack, Fonarow noted.

For instance, in a study involving obese mice, researchers found that adding cocoa to their high-fat diet slowed down their weight gain.

The mice “have elevated body fat, fasting blood glucose and serum insulin levels. And they have markers for systemic inflammation,” said study author Joshua Lambert, an assistant professor of food science at Pennsylvania State University.

After supplementing the animals’ diets with cocoa, “we saw that these markers of systemic inflammation went back down to the same level as they would be in mice that were on a low-fat diet,” Lambert said. “So it seems like we’re able to take this inflammatory response and reduce it back to the level you see in lean mice.”

In another study from Italy, 40 people, half of whom were smokers, were randomly assigned to receive either dark chocolate or milk chocolate. Dark chocolate only was found to reduce “oxidative stress” involved in dangerous clot formation — and only in smokers.

“The results, suggesting that dark chocolate can reduce oxidative stress and subsequent disease in smokers are intriguing and certainly worthy of further study,” said Dr. Thomas Glynn, director of cancer science and trends and international cancer control for the American Cancer Society.

“The authors establish the biological plausibility of antioxidant effects of dark chocolate in a small [group] of smokers and demonstrate the potential harm-reducing effects for smokers of eating dark chocolate,” Glynn said.

But, he added, “great caution is necessary, however, in interpreting the results of studies regarding the possible health benefits of dark chocolate — none of the evidence to date is definitive and is based on small studies with limited time duration. No one, despite the enjoyment of dark chocolate, should consider using it as a substitute for healthy eating, getting exercise and above all, stopping smoking.”

Also being presented at the meeting is a meta-analysis of human research on cocoa flavonoids and cardiac risk factors. The analysis, which combined data from 24 studies on 1,106 people, appeared in the Journal of Nutrition last September.

“Cocoa lowered blood pressure, lowered LDL ['bad'] cholesterol, raised HDL cholesterol — the good cholesterol — and improved insulin resistance,” said senior study author Eric Ding, a nutritionist, epidemiologist and faculty member at Harvard Medical School. He said cocoa also might have a role in dilating vessels to improve blood flow.

Ding warned not to look for health benefits from your favorite milk chocolate candy bar. “It’s not a chocolate study — it’s cocoa flavonoid,” he said.

Chocolate with Bill & Sheila
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5 steps to lower cholesterol

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5 steps to lower cholesterol

You’ve just left the doctor’s office, but before you hit the books spending the next few days educating yourself on how to get your cholesterol under control, take comfort in knowing there are some steps you can take to help manage your levels today.

Health claims made by a growing number of food products are making it even easier to improve your overall health. Making simple diet modifications and taking the time to exercise can help you manage your cholesterol levels, and a reduction in cholesterol of approximately 10 per cent may be achievable.

But what exactly does “combined with a healthy diet and exercise” mean when it comes to lowering cholesterol levels? Registered dietitian Amanda Schwartz provides some clarity with the following tips:

1. Add plant sterols to your diet: Naturally found in veggies and fruit, these compounds have now been approved by Health Canada for foods such as Astro BioBest probiotic yogourt with plant sterols. Each 100g serving is enriched with 50 per cent of the daily amount of plant sterols recommended to help lower your LDL “bad” cholesterol.

2. Hop on the scale: Being overweight not only raises total blood cholesterol levels, it throws your cholesterol levels out of balance, raising levels of LDL cholesterol (the harmful kind of cholesterol that clogs blood vessels) and lowering levels of HDL cholesterol (the good kind of cholesterol that helps clear blood vessels).

3. Get on the move: Run, bike, swim … you don’t have to embark on a triathlon, but by doing vigorous, aerobic exercise for 30 minutes each day for five days a week, you can positively impact your cholesterol levels by increasing HDL.

4. Eating well = forethought. Planning meals ahead makes it easier to live healthy. Have veggies and fruit pre-cut and washed for convenient snacks to help you reach that goal of five to 10 a day, ensure you’re eating fish twice a week as recommended by medical experts and make time to eat a healthy breakfast to boost your metabolism and maintain a healthy weight.

5. Get flexible in the kitchen — Recipes are just suggestions, so feel free to modify. Try adding a little fibre to your muffins, sauté with olive oil instead of butter, bake or grill instead of frying and when you’re baking, cut the fat (such as butter and oil) by half and replace it with mashed bananas or apple sauce to produce a moist product.

By making these simple lifestyle modifications you can maintain healthy cholesterol levels and significantly reduce your risk of heart disease.

More information on making healthy food choices can be found online at www.astro.ca.

www.newscanada.com


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Not all Fats are Bad

Not all Fats are Bad

Fats have been unfairly lumped together as being all bad for too long. Fat doesn’t necessarily cause disease, and can actually cause a role in its prevention. The truth is that some fats are very bad for us and some fats are actually very good for us.

Time has shown us that diets that restrict all fats fail in terms of weight loss. Since the end of World War II, Americans have been told that they need to restrict saturated fat in their diets. So we switched to margarine from butter, and did what we could to restrict fat. We have been constantly told that the reason for our health problems is that we still eat too much fat, especially saturated fats.

Since Americans have been told to eat a low fat diet to lose weight, the results are that nearly two thirds of adult Americans are now classified as overweight and more children are overweight now than ever before. Obviously something is wrong. That is because we need special kinds of fats in our diets that we are not getting.
If you are like me, you grew up being told that vegetable oils were the good oils and saturated fats were the bad ones. Now we are finding out that it is just the opposite. Diets that are moderate to high in “good” saturated fats and oils such as coconut oil and olive oil are actually very good for us. They raise good cholesterol levels and lower bad cholesterol, blood glucose and blood pressure. As a matter of fact, people who started adding at least 4 tablespoons of coconut oil to their diets every day, have found that they can now lose weight when they could not before on a fat restricted diet. Sometimes the addition of these oils even helps with their health problems.

It turns out that the bad guys are polyunsaturated oils, which carry toxic fatty acids (long chain fatty acids or LCT’s). These LCT’s tend to produce fat in the body. Polyunsaturated oils are the vegetable oils we commonly see in the grocery store, such as soy, corn, cottonseed, rapeseed and safflower.

We have been told that they lower cholesterol, but they way that they do is not healthy, as it ends up collecting in the liver. These oils are easily oxidized and damaged by free radicals. When cooked they become rancid in a few hours, even in the refrigerator. This causes damage to our body at a cellular level, the end results showing up as problems like diabetes, cancer, hypothyroidism and heart disease. And if that is not enough, these oils help us to get fat, lower the metabolic rate in our bodies, help suppress the thyroid function and cause our skin to age quicker.

Trans-fat is one of the worst bad guys. Trans-fatty acids often appear on ingredient labels as hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oils. It is what they do to vegetable oils to make them into hard fats such as margarine and vegetable shortening. It is used in the prepared food industry in baked goods like cookies, crackers, and most supermarket peanut butter to prolong the shelf life. These bad fats are used almost exclusively in fast foods that are fried. When heated and eaten, they turn into something like poison in your system, because your body can not process this kind of chemically made fat. Trans-fats not only increase levels of bad cholesterol, but they will decrease levels of good cholesterol in the blood stream and trans-fatty acids have been linked to heart disease, cancer and diabetes. Fats such as margarine and shortening should be totally avoided, as well as foods items that contain them.

The United States FDA is finally catching up to this truth, and by January 2006 they will be requiring food products to label the amount of trans-fat they have in them.) What is frightening is that trans-fats are found in over 40% of the products on our supermarket shelves.

The fatty acid chains in coconut and olive oil are medium-chain fatty acids (MCT’s) and they promote weight loss by increasing the body’s metabolism to create energy. Coconut oil has become popular lately, because it has been discovered that coconut oil is nature’s richest source of MTC’s. If you decide to add coconut oil to your diet, it is recommended that you purchase virgin coconut oil (VCO), usually found in health food stores, because it from the best part of the coconut and has not been chemically bleached and heat processed. It is better for cooking than olive oil, because olive oil can be damaged by the heat of cooking, making it similar to the other vegetable oils in the body when cooked.

Even saturated fat from animals is not as bad as it once was thought to be, especially if it is from organically raised animals (free range and grass fed). Organic butter has a very high conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) content, which helps us lose weight and gain muscle. But non-organic meats may still be dangerous because of the way the animals were raised or fed. Most grocery store meats are filled with hormones, pesticides, medicines and unhealthy fat that gets transferred to us when we eat it.

Organic grass fed and free range meat and eggs avoid these problems, and give us a much healthier source of protein and saturated fat. Organic saturated fats and oils are actually good for you and should be eaten daily. The body needs these fats for healthy functioning. So, forget the guilt and fry up that range-fed chicken in some coconut oil and enjoy!