Flavanol-Rich Diet Could Help Lower Blood Pressure
By Sci-News Staff / Source
Consuming a high-flavanol diet was associated with a significantly lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure and was inversely associated with blood lipids in a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
“Previous studies of large populations have
always relied on self-reported data to draw conclusions, but this is the first
epidemiological study of this scale to objectively investigate the association
between a specific bioactive compound and health,” said Professor Gunter Kuhnle, a nutritionist in the Department of
Food and Nutritional Sciences at the University of Reading.
“We are delighted to see
that in our study, there was also a meaningful and significant association
between flavanol consumption
and lower blood pressure.”
“What this study gives
us is an objective finding about the association between flavanols — found in
tea and some fruits — and blood pressure.”
“This research confirms the results from previous dietary intervention studies and shows that the same results can be achieved with a habitual diet rich in flavanols. In the British diet, the main sources are tea, cocoa, apples and berries.”
In the study, Professor
Kuhnle and colleagues investigated cross-sectional associations between
biomarker-estimated flavanol intake and blood pressure and other cardiovascular
disease risk markers.
They analyzed data from
25,618 participants of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer (EPIC) Norfolk cohort.
The difference in blood
pressure between those with the lowest 10% of flavanol intake and those with
the highest 10% of intake was between 2 and 4 mmHg.
This is comparable to
meaningful changes in blood pressure observed in those following a
Mediterranean diet or Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet.
Notably, the effect was
more pronounced in participants with hypertension.
“This study adds key
insights to a growing body of evidence supporting the benefits of dietary
flavanols in health and nutrition,” said co-author Dr. Hagen Schroeter,
Chief Science Officer at Mars Edge.
“But, perhaps even more
exciting was the opportunity to apply objective biomarkers of flavanol intake
at a large scale.”
“This enabled the team
to avoid the significant limitations that come with past approaches which rely
on estimating intake based on self-reported food consumption data and the
shortcomings of current food composition databases.”
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J.I. Ottaviani et al.
2020. Biomarker-estimated flavan-3-ol intake is associated with lower blood
pressure in cross-sectional analysis in EPIC Norfolk. Sci Rep 10,
17964; doi: 10.1038/s41598-020-74863-7