“Eating more fiber can mean a healthier heart later in life,
researchers find.”
Waiting until the Golden Years to worry about cardiovascular disease may be
a thing of the past. An estimated 43 percent of US children and teens have at
least one risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to new data
from the Centers for Disease Control.
More than one-third of America’s youth are now overweight or obese—while
these rates have leveled off over the past decade, disease risk has not. In the
last 12 years, cases of prediabetes and diabetes in adolescence have jumped 14
percent (now at 23 percent, up from 9 percent in the year 2000).
Children with obesity are 24 percent more likely to display a risk factor
for CVD than normal weight children. The most common risk factor for CVD in
youth was elevated LDL cholesterol (the “bad” cholesterol that transports fat
from the liver to the tissues). The other risk factors include: high total
cholesterol, low HDL cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, and
inflammation. Formerly concerns for the aged, these warning signs are now
causing concern for younger generations.
The progression as well as the prevention of cardiac risks starts in
childhood. New research from Maastricht University in the Netherlands found
that intake of fiber during childhood predicted artery stiffness—a
cardiovascular risk factor—in adulthood.
“Lower lifetime intake of fiber during the course of young age is associated
with carotid artery stiffness in adulthood,” the authors write. The average
differences in fiber intake amounted to about 2 grams per day; however, with
time these small quantities made a big impact on health qualities. The
researchers explained that the difference in fiber intake amounted to one-half
of a portion of broccoli or one apple each day.
A longitudinal cohort study followed the dietary habits of 373 children from
the age of 13 to 36. Food frequency questionnaires were collected at eight
different follow-ups over the course of the 24-year study and the authors
measured arterial stiffness during the last session when the children were
approximately 36 years old.
Not only did fiber intake mediate cardiovascular risk, this research
provides further evidence that poor dietary habits in youth kick start the
damage that may not be found until adulthood. ”The differences in fiber
intake between individuals with stiffer compared with those with less stiff
arteries were already present during adolescence,” the authors report.
Fruit, vegetables, and whole-grains are known to be high in fiber. While a
lower total intake of fiber was associated with risk, these foods have a
variety of vitamins, minerals, and phytochemicals that may also deliver the
brunt of the benefits. In addition to arterial stiffness, vegetable intake had
an inverse relationship to blood pressure, central obesity, and blood
lipids—all factors linked to cardiovascular health.
The authors explain that arterial stiffness is linked to higher blood
pressure, higher stress on the heart and reduced cardiac function. Conditions
in childhood, such as sedentary lifestyle, central body fatness, and higher
blood pressure, are known to increase arterial stiffness in adulthood. Adding
to the growing list, these authors report that low intake of fiber in childhood
may be a precursor to arterial stiffness.
Coupled with the report published in journal Pediatrics, these
results are novel and timely. The national survey data suggests that “U.S.
adolescents carry a substantial burden of CVD risk factors, especially those
who are overweight or obese.” Increasing fiber intake to reduce children’s risk
provides a simple solution to improve the health trajectory of the nation.
References
May AL et al. Provalence of Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors Among US
Adolescents, 1999-2008. Pediatrics 2012; 129(6):1035-41. DOI:
10.1542/peds.2011-1082
Van de Laar RJJ et al. Lower lifetime dietary fiber intake is associated
with carotid artery stiffness: the Amsterdam Growth and Health Longitudinal
Sutyd. Am J Clin Nutr 2012. DOI:
10.3945/ajcn.111.024703
No comments:
Post a Comment