Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Diabetic? Eat pistachios daily for super health

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Aug, 2014 07:42 AM
  • Diabetic? Eat pistachios daily for super health
Love pistachios? You have another reason to have these tree nuts if your sugar levels are high as eating pistachios may reduce vascular response to stress in type 2 diabetes.
 
“In adults with diabetes, two servings of pistachios per day lowered vascular constriction during stress and improved neural control of the heart,” said Sheila G. West, a professor of biobehavioral health and nutritional sciences at Pennsylvania State University.
 
Although nuts are high in fat, they contain good fats, fibre, potassium and antioxidants.
 
“Given the high risk of heart disease in people with diabetes, nuts are an important component of a heart healthy diet in this population,” West added.
 
During the investigation on patients with type 2 diabetes about the effects of pistachios, researchers randomised patients to one of two test diets.
 
Test diets included a standard heart-healthy diet - 27 percent fat and seven percent saturated fat - and a diet containing two servings per day of pistachios - about 3 ounces or 20 percent of calories from pistachio nuts.
 
The typical research participant consumed about 150 pistachio nuts per day.
 
The pistachio diet contained 33 percent fat and 7 percent saturated fat.
 
“After the pistachio diet, blood vessels remained more relaxed and open during the stress tests,” West said.
 
They found that systolic blood pressure during sleep was particularly affected by pistachios.
 
“Average sleep blood pressure was reduced by about four points and this would be expected to lower workload on the heart,” West noted.
 
The researchers also recorded improvements in heart rate variability, a measure of how well the nervous system controls heart function.
 
The results appeared in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Practice will make you better, if not perfect

Practice will make you better, if not perfect
Practice will not make you perfect but it will usually make you better at what you are practicing, a promising study shows.

Practice will make you better, if not perfect

Smokers at higher suicide risk: Study

Smokers at higher suicide risk: Study
Irrespective of whether they are suffering from psychiatric disorders or not, cigarette smokers are more likely to commit suicide than people who do not smoke, a study shows...

Smokers at higher suicide risk: Study

World's first vaccine for heart disease soon a reality?

World's first vaccine for heart disease soon a reality?
Scientists are one step closer to developing the world's first vaccine for heart disease that will reduce immune-based inflammation in arteries, leading to decreased plaque buildup...

World's first vaccine for heart disease soon a reality?

Short men have more sex

Short men have more sex
If you are moderately short or even short, do not worry as you will be a champion when it comes to performing the real act.

Short men have more sex

More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study

More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study
Contrary to popular belief, a significant study shows that teenage boys are not looking for sex but intimate and meaningful relationships with the opposite sex.

More teenage boys seeking trust not sex: Study

Men out-talk women in large settings

Men out-talk women in large settings
Contrary to the stereotype that women talk more than men, researchers have found that there is an interplay between the context and gender and men can out-talk women in large settings, but women do the most talking in small settings.

Men out-talk women in large settings