“Westers” dieet geeft grotere kans op beroerte.*
“Westers”dieet met veel rood vlees, geraffineerde granen
en zoet geeft bijna 60% meer kans op een beroerte dan een dieet met veel vis,
groente, fruit en volle granen blijkt uit een 15 jarige studie onder ruim
71.000 vrouwen
"Western" diets
consisting of red and processed meats, refined grains, sweets and desserts may
be associated with a greater risk of stroke, according to a study published in
this week's rapid access issue of Stroke: Journal of the American Heart
Association.
A "prudent" diet
characterized by higher intakes of fruits, vegetables, fish, legumes and whole
grains – like the one the American Heart Association recommends – may
protect against stroke, the study found. This is the first study to examine
overall dietary habits and stroke risk.
"Several foods and
nutrients have been linked to the risk of stroke; therefore, dietary
modification may be an important way to reduce the risk of stroke," said
Teresa Fung, Sc.D., the study's lead author and assistant professor of
nutrition at Simmons College School for Health Studies in Boston, and adjunct
assistant professor of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health.
"Because nutrients and food are consumed in combination, their cumulative
effect on disease risk may be best investigated by considering the entire
eating pattern."
Researchers gathered dietary
information on 71,768 female nurses, ages 38-63, who had no history of heart
disease or diabetes. Starting in 1984 and following them until 1998,
researchers identified two dietary patterns: "prudent" and
"Western."
The women reported their
health, lifestyle, and diet information to the Harvard School of Public Health
every two to four years. Researchers examined whether their diet affected
subsequent stroke risk.
During 14 years of follow-up,
791 strokes occurred: 476 ischemic (caused by a blocked artery in the brain),
189 hemorrhagic (caused by a blood vessel rupturing on or near the brain) and
126 unclassified strokes.
Based on what they were
eating, each nurse received two scores. The "prudent" score
reflected how closely their diet resembled the prudent dietary pattern and the
"Western" score reflected how closely their diet resembled the
Western pattern. A higher score indicated closer adherence to the dietary
pattern. The women were ranked according to the scores, then divided into five
groups (quintiles). Because each participant received a Western diet and a
prudent diet score, there was one group of quintiles for each type of diet.
Those who were at the bottom quintile of each dietary pattern became the
reference group, and all the other quintiles were compared against them, Fung
said.
Researchers observed a higher
relative risk for stroke among those consuming a Western diet. After
controlling for lifestyle and risk factors for stroke, the risk for any type
of stroke among women with the highest Western diet scores was 58 percent
greater than the risk for women in the lowest quintile. The increased risk for
ischemic stroke was about 56 percent greater.
While the results show that
risk of any stroke for women with the highest prudent diet score was 22
percent lower than women with the lowest prudent diet score, these results
were not statistically significant.
Women with Western eating
habits were more likely to smoke, less likely to take vitamins and less
active, the study found.
Women who ate the Western diet
and also had hypertension had more than three times the risk of strokes caused
by blockages compared with Western dieters without hypertension.
"Overall dietary patterns
are easier to recommend to the public than individual foods," Fung said.
Although no men were included
in the study, Fung said the results have applications for men's diets as well.
"I'd like to see people
examine different components of their diets and make positive changes
accordingly," she said.
More diet studies using food
patterns may determine if this is the most effective way to identify disease
risk.
Co-authors are Meir J. Stampfer, M.D., DPH; JoAnn E. Manson, M.D., DPH.; Kathryn M. Rexrode, M.D.; Walter C. Willett, M.D., DPH.; and Frank B. Hu, M.D., Ph.D. (juli 2004)