Eating more bright-colored fruits and vegetables can help prevent women's health issues
University of Georgia
Women tend to live longer than men but typically have higher rates of illness.
Now, new research from University of Georgia suggests these higher rates of illness can be improved by a better diet, one that is high in pigmented carotenoids such as yams, kale, spinach, watermelon, bell peppers, tomatoes, oranges and carrots.
These bright-colored fruits and vegetables are particularly important
in preventing visual and cognitive loss.
"The idea is that men get a lot of the diseases that tend to kill you, but women get those diseases less often or later so they perseverate but with illnesses that are debilitating," said Billy R. Hammond, a professor in UGA's Franklin College of Arts and Sciences department of psychology behavioral and brains sciences program and co-author of the study.
"For example, of all of the
existing cases of macular degeneration and dementia in the world, two-thirds
are women … these diseases that women suffer for years are the very ones most
amenable to prevention through lifestyle."
The study, which reviewed and analyzed data from previous studies, detailed several degenerative conditions, from autoimmune diseases to dementia that, even controlling for lifespan differences, women experience at much higher rates than men.
"If you take all the autoimmune diseases collectively, women
account for nearly 80%. So, because of this vulnerability, linked directly to
biology, women need extra preventive care," Hammond said.
How does gender affect health?
One
of the reasons for this vulnerability has to do with the way women store
vitamins and minerals in their bodies. Hammond points out that women have, on
average, more body fat than men. Body fat serves as a significant sink for many
dietary vitamins and minerals, which creates a useful reservoir for women
during pregnancy. This availability, however, means less is available for the
retina and the brain, putting women at more risk for degenerative problems.
Dietary
intake of pigmented carotenoids act as antioxidants for humans. Two specific
carotenoids, lutein and zeaxanthin, are found in specific tissues of the eye
and brain and have been shown to directly improve central nervous system
degeneration.
"Men
and women eat about the same amount of these carotenoids, but the requirements
for women are much higher," said Hammond.
"The recommendations should be different, but there are, generally, not any recommendations for men or women for dietary components that are not directly linked to deficiency disease (like vitamin C and scurvy)," Hammond said.
"Part of the idea for the article is that recommendations need to be
changed so that women are aware that they have these vulnerabilities that they
have to proactively address, so they don't have these problems later in
life."
Carotenoids
are also available via supplements, and the National Institutes of Health has
focused resources on specific carotenoids through the National Eye Institute
program. And though supplements of lutein and zeaxanthin are a way of
increasing intake, Hammond said getting them through food is a much better
strategy.
"Components of diet influence the brain, from things like personality to even our concept of self. I don't think people quite realize what a profound effect diet has on basically who they are, their mood, even their propensity to anger," Hammond said.
"And now of course this is extended to the microbiome and the bacteria that make up your gut -- all of these components work together to create the building blocks that compose our brain and the neurotransmitters that mediate its use."