Pure
chocolade tegen hoge bloeddruk.*
Uit
onderzoek dat maandag door de Amerikaanse Hartstichting is gepubliceerd, blijkt
namelijk dat pure chocolade de bloeddruk kan verlagen. Bestanddelen in de
chocolade, zogenoemde flavonoïden, zorgen dat de bloedvaten beter werken. Toch
is de studie geen pleidooi voor het eten van meer chocolade. De onderzoekers
waarschuwen dat chocolade vet is en veel suiker en calorieën bevat en daarom met
mate gebruikt dient te worden.
Wel
blijkt en is al eerder ook vastgesteld dat witte en melk chocolade de voordelen
niet hebben, dus als je chocolade eet neem dan de pure of zwarte.
Dark
Chocolate May Sweeten the Way to Health
Daily
dose lowered blood pressure, improved insulin sensitivity, study showed.
-
If it tastes good it must be bad, so the saying goes, but delicious dark
chocolate may be the exception to the rule.
In
addition to all the pleasurable sensations associated with the sweet, it may
also help lower blood
pressure
by an average of 10 percent while improving the body's sensitivity to Insulin,
researchers report. However, this benefit applies only to dark chocolate, which
is rich in flavonoids -- the same antioxidant compounds found in fruits,
vegetables and whole grains that are known to help lower blood pressure,
according to the report in the July 18 online edition of Hypertension.
"It turns out that chocolate is not only a pleasurable food, but it fits in
quite nicely with the other healthy recommendations," said coauthor Jeffrey
B. Blumberg, a professor of nutrition and a senior scientist at the Jean Mayer
USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts University. "We
found that three ounces of dark chocolate per day over several weeks reduced
blood pressure in patients with essential
hypertension
and also seemed to provide a benefit on their insulin sensitivity," he
added.
In
their study, Blumberg's team had 10 men and 10 women eat 3.5 ounces of dark
chocolate every day for 15 days. All of these people had high
blood pressure and
none were taking blood pressure medications.
First,
the researchers had five of the men and five of the women eat dark chocolate
while the others ate white chocolate, which contains no flavonoids. Then after
another week of no chocolate, the groups "crossed over" and ate the
other chocolate.
In
the 15 days they were eating dark chocolate, individuals displayed an average
11.9 mm Hg drop in their systolic blood pressure (the top number in a blood
pressure reading) and a 8.5 mm Hg drop in diastolic blood pressure (the lower
number). However, there was no drop in blood pressure when they ate
flavonoid-free white chocolate, the researchers found.
Given
these results, Blumberg believes that dark chocolate can be good for you. "Dark
chocolate can be included as part of a healthful diet in patients who have
hypertension," he said.
However,
he cautioned that you can't just add it on top of your diet. "It's still a
high-calorie food. You don't want to have excess calories or put on weight if
you have hypertension," Blumberg said. "But as part of a healthful
diet, it is something that you can enjoy and not feel you are violating the
principles of a healthful diet."
Blumberg
thinks that being able to enjoy some chocolate can also make it easier to stay
on a healthy diet that is rich in fruits, vegetables and whole grains.
One
expert sees this study as part of a body of evidence that shows that chocolate
is good for us. "Dark chocolate may be health-promoting," said Dr.
David L. Katz, an associate clinical professor of public health and director of
the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine.
Katz,
who is doing his own research into the benefits of chocolate, noted that
chocolate is rich in not only antioxidants,
but also magnesium and fiber.
"The predominant saturated fat
in dark chocolate, stearic acid, does not raise cholesterol
or harm blood vessels," he added.
"Milk
chocolate and white chocolate do not offer any known health benefits, and
provide more calories, sugar, and potentially harmful oils than dark
chocolate," Katz said, but "dark chocolate may well prove to be health
food."
According
to Katz, there are many unanswered questions about chocolate: What is the
optimal dose of dark chocolate? How high does the cocoa content need to be to
offer health benefits? Who in the population stands to benefit from eating dark
chocolate? Are the benefits of liquid cocoa and solid chocolate the same? Can
people eat chocolate without gaining
weight?
"These
answers, and others, will come in time," Katz said. "For now, it's
clear that not all chocolate is created equal. But it's delicious to think that
indulgence and health may both reside beneath the same wrapper."
Another
expert is more cautious. Without more definitive data on whether chocolate
promotes weight gain that might outweigh its benefits, Dr. Jeffrey Mechanick,
the director of the Metabolic Support Service at Mount Sinai School of Medicine,
is hesitant to recommend it as a health food. "I would never tell a heart
patient or a diabetic to eat more dark chocolate," he said.
For
patients who do not have these health problems, Mechanick is more lenient.
"Having a treat every once in a while is fine," he said. "My
preference is that you have dark chocolate, because it's looking like maybe dark
chocolate may have some benefit. But there are no data to support that it's
truly beneficial. It's still unproven that it's beneficial and there could be
risks involved."
Mechanick
also warned that the data about the benefits of dark chocolate should not mean
replacing other high blood pressure therapy with chocolate. "Chocolate is
not an alternative to traditional lifestyle changes or to taking medications to
reduce risk of heart
disease
or to treat diabetes,"
he said. (Juli 2005)