Daily
serving may help control weight and benefit health
American Heart
Association
Eating Brazil nuts and other varieties of nuts daily may prevent weight gain and provide other cardiovascular benefits, according to two separate preliminary studies to be presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2018 in Chicago, a premier global exchange of the latest advances in cardiovascular science for researchers and clinicians.
Eating Brazil nuts and other varieties of nuts daily may prevent weight gain and provide other cardiovascular benefits, according to two separate preliminary studies to be presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2018 in Chicago, a premier global exchange of the latest advances in cardiovascular science for researchers and clinicians.
One
study analyzed the influence of eating nuts and peanuts on long-term body weight in
U.S. men and women. The other study examined whether eating Brazil nuts could
increases a sense of fullness and improve glucose and insulin responses.
In the analysis of nuts’ impact on weight, researchers followed health professionals who were free of chronic disease at the start of the study. They found that eating a one one-ounce serving of any type of nuts or peanuts, in place of foods generally considered low in nutritional value, was associated with a lower risk of long-term weight gain and obesity.
Nut
consumption was assessed through a food-frequency questionnaire submitted to
participants every four years in three different established study groups of
25,394 men in the Health Professionals Follow-up Study, 53,541 women in the
Nurse’s Health Study and 47,255 women in the Nurse’s Health Study II in
follow-up research.
Findings
revealed that:
- Eating a daily serving of any type of nut or peanuts
was associated with less risk of weight gain or becoming obese over the
four-year intervals.
- Substituting one serving a day of any type of nuts in
place of one serving of red meat, processed meat, French fries, desserts
or potato chips was associated with less weight gain over the four-year
intervals.
A
serving of nuts is defined as one ounce of whole nuts or two tablespoons of nut
butter. “People often see nuts as food items high in fat and calories, so they
hesitate to consider them as healthy snacks, but they are in fact associated
with less weight gain and wellness,” said Xiaoran Liu, Ph.D., first author of
the study and a research associate in the nutrition department of Harvard School
of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts.
“Once
people reach adulthood, they start to gradually gain about one pound a year of
weight, which seems small. But if you consider gaining one pound over 20 years,
it accumulates to a lot of weight gain,” she said. “Adding one ounce of nuts to
your diet in place of less healthy foods -- such as red or processed meat,
French fries or sugary snacks -- may help prevent that slow, gradual weight
gain after you enter adulthood and reduce the risk of obesity-related
cardiovascular diseases.”
Participants
in the research on the influence of nuts on weight gain were mainly white and
part of the health profession, but researchers believe even with this
limitation the findings can be applied to a general population.
In
the Brazil nut study, conducted at San Diego State University in 2017 through a
grant from the American Heart Association, 22 healthy adults (20 women and two
men) age 20 or older with a mean body mass index of 22.3, consumed either 36
grams of pretzels or 20 grams of Brazil nuts (about five nuts) in addition to
their usual diet.
The Brazil nuts and pretzels had approximately the same amount of calories and sodium. Participants ate either the nuts or the pretzels in two trials with a washout period of at least 48 hours to prevent carryover effects.
The Brazil nuts and pretzels had approximately the same amount of calories and sodium. Participants ate either the nuts or the pretzels in two trials with a washout period of at least 48 hours to prevent carryover effects.
The
study found:
- Both Brazil nuts and pretzels significantly increased a
sense of fullness and reduced feelings of hunger, with the greatest sense
of fullness experienced by the group eating Brazil nuts compared to those
eating pretzels.
- Pretzel consumption caused a significant increase in
blood glucose and insulin at 40-minutes after they were eaten, compared to
the start of the trial, whereas eating Brazil nuts did not significantly
increase blood glucose or insulin.
“While
both Brazil nuts and pretzels increased a sense of fullness after they were
eaten, eating Brazil nuts stabilized postprandial (after eating) blood glucose
and insulin levels, which may be beneficial in preventing diabetes and weight
gain,” said Mee Young Hong, Ph.D, R.D., senior author of the study and
professor in the School of Exercise & Nutritional Sciences at San
Diego State University in San Diego, California.
Brazil
nuts are one of the highest known food sources of selenium, a mineral which the
researchers note in previous studies may be associated with improvements in
insulin and glucose responses. Insulin is produced in the pancreas and is a
catalyst for processing glucose into energy. Some people are insulin resistant
or don’t produce enough insulin, which means glucose can reach unhealthy levels
and result in diabetes, a major risk factor for heart attacks and strokes.
“Our
study allows researchers and clinicians to consider the possible beneficial
role of Brazil nuts to help people feel full and maintain a healthy level of
glucose, reducing the risk of obesity and diabetes,” Hong said.
In
the Brazil nut study, only 9 percent of the participants were men, so the
findings should not be generalized to a male population according to Hong.
Co-authors
of the study on the influence of nuts on weight gain are Yanping Li, Ph.D.;
Marta Guasch-Ferré, Ph.D.; Walter Willett, M.D., Dr.P.H.; Frank Hu, M.D.,
Ph.D.; and Deirdre Tobias, Sc.D.
Co-authors
of the Brazil nut study are Alison Rosenstock, B.S.; Megan Connolly, B.S.; and
Rebecca Weller B.S. Author disclosures are on the abstract.
The
National Institutes of Health and the California Walnut Commission funded the
study on nuts and weight. The American Heart Association funded the study on
Brazil nuts.