January 06, 2015

06/01/2015: Eating Whole Grains May Help You Live Longer – Study


Eating whole grains such as popcorn, oats and quinoa is linked to increased longevity and may decrease risk for deaths from cardiovascular disease over a 25-year period, but not cancer deaths, according to a new study, Live Science reports.

The new research is one of many large studies that tie a diet high in whole grains to increased longevity, including deaths due to cardiovascular disease.

http://www.livescience.com/49318-whole-grain-lower-mortality.html

"I think it's quite conclusive that if you eat whole grains, you almost always benefit," said the new study's senior researcher, Dr Qi Sun, an assistant professor of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.

In the study, the researchers looked at two large studies, including about 74,000 women who were taking part in the Nurses' Health Study, and nearly 44,000 men participating in the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study. The participants recorded their whole-grain intake on food surveys given every two to four years.

After 24 to 26 years, 26,920 people in the studies had died.

The new study has three main findings, Sun said. First, the researchers found that people who ate at least 28 grams of whole grains a day had a 5 percent lower risk of dying over the study period, and a 9 percent lower risk of dying from cardiovascular-disease-related death than people who ate little or no whole grains during the course of the study.

The researchers also found that eating the part of the whole grain called the bran had the largest effect on reducing mortality and deaths from cardiovascular disease. The bran is the tough skin that covers the kernel of a whole grain, and holds antioxidants, B vitamins and fibre. Processing whole grains into refined grains typically removes much of the grains' bran, according to the Harvard School of Public Health.

People in the study who replaced one serving a day of refined grains with whole grains reduced their risk of dying over the study period by 8 percent, and people who replaced one daily serving of red meat with whole grains reduced their risk of dying over the study period by 20 percent, the researchers also found.

The researchers accounted for other factors that could have affected the study participants' risk of dying over the study period, such as age, smoking, body mass index, exercise and general diet. This was especially important because the men and women who ate more whole grains also tended to get more exercise, eat other healthy foods, smoke less and drink less alcohol than people who ate fewer whole grains.



Read more HERE.
 

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