Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Have Peanuts With Meal To Ward Off Heart Diseases

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Mar, 2015 12:00 PM
    Including peanut in a high-fat meal may protect your heart from the negative effects of such a diet, suggests a new study.
     
    Peanuts can be substituted for high-fat, nutrient-poor foods in the diet that contain solid fats, said the study recently presented at the American Society for Nutrition's 79th scientific sessions and annual meeting in Boston.
     
    "Previous studies have shown that individuals who consume peanuts more than two times a week have a lower risk of coronary heart disease," said lead researcher Xiaoran Liu, graduate student at the Pennsylvania State University, US.
     
    "This study indicates that the protective effect of peanut consumption could be due, in part, to its beneficial effect on artery health," Liu added.
     
    The purpose of this research was to evaluate vascular function after a high-fat meal.
     
    Overweight males were randomised to consume either shake with peanuts or a control meal (a shake without peanuts) that were matched for energy and macronutrients.
     
    The lipid profile, glucose and insulin were measured five times after each meal.
     
    Flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) was measured to assess vascular function.
     
    The control meal decreased FMD by 1.2 percent compared to baseline. In contrast, there was no decrease in FMD after the peanut meal.
     
    These results demonstrate that the peanut meal maintained normal vascular function whereas the control meal impaired vascular function acutely, the researchers noted.
     
    Vascular dysfunction plays a major role in the development of atherosclerosis, the formation of coronary plaques and lesions that lead to coronary artery disease.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Research offers hope for patients with cardiovascular disease

    Research offers hope for patients with cardiovascular disease
    A new research has shown a protein, which controls the growth of new blood vessels, could potentially reduce the effects of cardiovascular disease...

    Research offers hope for patients with cardiovascular disease

    Premature babies at greater risk of future hip replacements

    Premature babies at greater risk of future hip replacements
    Low birth weight and premature birth are linked to increased risk of osteoarthritis-related hip replacements in adulthood, says a research....

    Premature babies at greater risk of future hip replacements

    Nanobodies to help out in boosting immunity

    Nanobodies to help out in boosting immunity
    Targetting difficult-to-reach areas affected by disease could become a lot easier as researchers have developed a new system to make nanobodies...

    Nanobodies to help out in boosting immunity

    Cancer cell fingerprints could hasten diagnosis in kids

    Cancer cell fingerprints could hasten diagnosis in kids
    Cancers in children will be diagnosed faster and more accurately in future as researchers have identified new cancer cell fingerprints in blood....

    Cancer cell fingerprints could hasten diagnosis in kids

    Dysfunctional protein causes Alzheimer's

    Dysfunctional protein causes Alzheimer's
    Debunking a prevalent theory of Alzheimer's development, researchers have now found that it is not the amyloid-beta (A-beta) protein fragments but the...

    Dysfunctional protein causes Alzheimer's

    Speech analyser could reveal mental health

    Speech analyser could reveal mental health
    A programme that analyses speech and uses it to gain information about one's mental health is in the works....

    Speech analyser could reveal mental health