And tasty too
By KETCHUM NEW YORK
Eating walnuts may reinforce favorable health effects such as improved diet quality and increased probability of physical activity.
Researchers found that participants who ate walnuts early in life showed a greater likelihood of being more physically active, having a higher quality diet, and experiencing a better heart disease risk profile as they aged into middle adulthood after reviewing 20 years of diet history and 30 years of physical and clinical measurements.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of
the National Institutes of Health funded the long-term and ongoing Coronary
Artery Risk Development in Young Adults Study (CARDIA), which intended to look
at how risk factors for heart disease develop over time.
This study is one of the longest to demonstrate
that including a few heart-healthy walnuts into the diet on a regular basis may
serve as a springboard for the eventual adoption of other healthy lifestyle
practices.
The results also support the idea that walnut
consumption throughout adolescence and middle adulthood may reduce a number of
heart disease risk factors.
Researchers from the University of Minnesota School of Public Health note in a recent study published in the journal Nutrition, Metabolism & Cardiovascular Diseases that a possible explanation for the findings could be related to the special combination of nutrients found in walnuts and their impact on health outcomes.
Walnuts are the only tree nut that is an
excellent source of the plant-based omega-3 alpha-linolenic acid (2.5 grams/oz.), which research shows may play a
role in heart health, brain health, and healthy aging. Additionally, just one
serving of walnuts (1 oz.), or about a handful, contains a variety of other
important nutrients to support overall health including 4 grams of protein, 2
grams of fiber, and a good source of magnesium (45 milligrams). Walnuts also
offer a variety of antioxidants, including polyphenols.
According to Professor of Epidemiology and
Community Health at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health and
Lead Researcher on CARDIA, Lyn M. Steffen, Ph.D., MPH, RD, “Walnut eaters seem
to have a unique body phenotype that carries with it other positive impacts on
health like better diet quality, especially when they start eating walnuts from
young into middle adulthood – as risk of chronic diseases like heart disease,
obesity, and diabetes elevates.”
Study Overview
In this observational, longitudinal study, partially supported by the California Walnut Commission, diet and health information was collected and analyzed from 3,023 otherwise healthy black and white men and women aged 18-30 at one of four field centers located in Birmingham, AL, Chicago, IL, Minneapolis, MN, and Oakland, CA, when the CARDIA study began in 1985-86.
Self-reported diet history was taken at three times
throughout the study: baseline, year seven, and year 20. Physical and clinical
measurements were taken at multiple exams spanning 30 years.
Diet history was categorized into “walnut
consumers,” “other nut consumers,” or “no nut consumers,” and assessed for
relationships among heart disease risk factors, including dietary intake,
smoking, body composition, blood pressure, plasma lipids
(e.g., triglycerides), fasting blood glucose, and insulin concentrations in 352
walnut consumers, 2,494 other nut consumers, and 177 no nut consumers.
The average intake of walnuts during the study
was about ¾ oz./day, and the intake of nuts among other nut consumers was about
1 ½ oz./day.
“There was a good degree of diversity in terms
of the research field locations geographically speaking and the population
studied,” said Steffen. “Following these black and white women and men for 30
years provides an unparalleled window of study into how lifestyle decisions
made in free-living environments in young adulthood can affect health in middle
age,” adds Steffen.
Study Results At A Glance
Overall, the researchers reported the following
results:
Physical and Clinical Indicators of Heart
Disease Risk After 30 Years:
- Walnut consumers had higher
self-reported physical activity scores than other nut and no-nut
consumers.
- Compared to other nut
consumers, eating walnuts was linked with a better heart disease risk
profile:
- Lower body mass index
- Lower waist circumference
- Lower blood pressure
- Lower blood triglyceride
levels
- Eating walnuts was associated
with less weight gain over the study period, and fewer participants who
ate walnuts were classified as people with obesity compared to other nut
and no-nut consumers.
- Compared to no-nut consumers,
walnut consumers had significantly lower fasting blood glucose
concentrations while other nut consumers had higher LDL cholesterol.
Markers of Diet Quality After 20 Years:
Including walnuts in the diet during young
adulthood was favorably linked with a higher total diet quality score (Healthy
Eating Index 2015) when compared to other and no-nut consumers.
Compared to other nut or no-nut consumers,
people who ate walnuts had the following self-reported daily dietary intakes,
including a significant relationship with higher intakes of several
under-consumed nutrients and food groups of public health importance as
outlined in the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans:
Higher (Unit)
- Polyunsaturated fat intake
(%kcal)
- Gamma-linolenic acid (GLA) +
Alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) intake (grams)
- Dietary fiber intake* (grams)
- Vitamin B6 intake (milligrams)
- Magnesium intake (milligrams)
- Vitamin E intake (milligrams)
- Potassium intake* (milligrams)
- Whole grains* (servings per
day)
- Fruit* (servings per day)
- Vegetables* (servings per day)
- Legumes* (servings per day)
- Fish (servings per day)
- Protein sources (servings per
day)
Lower (Unit)
- Saturated fat intake (% kcal)
- Added sugar intake (% kcal)
- Refined grain products
(servings per day)
- Red meat (servings per day)
- Processed red meat (servings
per day)
“Nut consumers showed an advantage in relation to diet quality, but walnut consumers appear to have a better heart disease risk factor profile than the other groups, even after accounting for overall diet quality,” said Steffen.
“The surprising, healthy shifts in the overall
dietary pattern of walnut consumers suggests walnuts may act as a bridge or
‘carrier food’ for helping people form healthy nutrition and lifestyle habits
throughout life.”
While these results are positive and confirm
earlier work from the CARDIA study on the health benefits of walnut
intake, randomized controlled clinical trials should be done in other
populations and settings to confirm the observations in the current study.
Observational studies cannot support cause-and-effect conclusions.
Additionally, some of the outcomes for heart disease risk factors relating to cholesterol and lipids in the current study are inconsistent with previous randomized controlled trials.
This could
be related to differences in study design, including the duration of the
intervention (e.g., several months to 30 years) or the amount of nut intake.
Last, the researchers did not isolate other specific nuts in their database, so
findings cannot indicate no benefit of other nuts.
This study is one of the longest to suggest that
adding about a handful of walnuts to the diet every day and early on in life
could be linked with benefits to overall diet quality as a heart-healthy
“carrier food” that fits into any eating occasion.
Reference: “Association of nut consumption with
CVD risk factors in young to middle-aged adults: The Coronary Artery Risk
Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study” by So-Yun Yi, Lyn M. Steffen, Xia
Zhou, James M. Shikany and David R. Jacobs Jr., 30 July 2022, Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases.
DOI: 10.1016/j.numecd.2022.07.013
The study was funded by the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute and the California Walnut Commission.