Meer plantaardige eiwitten tegen hoge bloeddruk.*
Uit een onderzoek onder 4.680 mensen blijkt dat zij die meer plantaardige eiwitten in hun voeding gebruiken een lagere bloeddruk hebben dan zij die meer dierlijke eiwitten in hun voeding gebruiken. Het hoe en waarom is niet echt duidelijk, vermoedelijk hebben bepaalde aminozuren ermee te maken. Wel is weer gebleken dat een meer plantaardig dieet goed is voor een goede bloeddruk en daarmee andere ziektes helpt voorkomen.
Those
Who Eat More Protein From Vegetables Tend To Have Lower Blood Pressure
People who eat more protein from
vegetables tend to have lower blood pressure, according to a new study in the
January issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Most adults have either high blood pressure (hypertension) or prehypertensive blood
pressure levels, according to background information in the article. Previous
studies have found evidence that meat eaters generally have higher blood
pressure than vegetarians. Other research looked directly at the effect of high
overall protein intake and found that people with higher total protein intake
are likely to have lower blood pressure, the authors report.
Paul Elliott, M.B., Ph.D., from Imperial College London, and colleagues analyzed
data from the INTERMAP study, which included 4,680 people (2,359 men and 2,321
women) aged 40 to 59 years from four countries. They measured each participant's
systolic and diastolic blood pressure eight times at four visits in a three- to
six-week period. Each person wrote down everything they had eaten and drank
during the previous 24 hours, including dietary supplements, at each visit.
Urine samples were also taken on the first and third examinations.
Judging by their food records and urine samples, those who ate more vegetable
protein were more likely to have lower blood pressure than those who ate less
vegetable protein. Though the researchers noted a slight association between
animal protein and high blood pressure, this link disappeared when they accounted
for participants' height and weight. There was no link between total protein
intake and blood pressure, in contrast to previous studies.
The researchers are unsure exactly how vegetable proteins might affect blood
pressure, but note from their data that amino acids may play a role. Some of
these building blocks of protein have been shown to influence blood pressure,
and different amino acids were present in diets high in vegetable protein than
in those that contained more animal protein. Other dietary components of
vegetables, such as magnesium, also may interact with amino acids to lower blood
pressure.
"Our results are consistent with current recommendations that a diet high
in vegetable products be part of a healthy lifestyle for prevention of high
blood pressure and related
chronic diseases," the authors write. "Definitive ascertainment of a
causal relationship between vegetable protein intake and blood pressure awaits
further data from randomized controlled trials, especially regarding the effect
of constituent amino acids on blood pressure."
(Arch Intern Med. 2006; 166:79-87)
Editor's Note: This study was supported by a grant from the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md.; by the Chicago Health Research Foundation;
by a grant from the Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, and Culture, Tokyo;
and by national agencies in the People's Republic of China and in the United
Kingdom.
Paul Elliott
p.elliott@imperial.ac.uk
JAMA and Archives Journals
http://www.jamamedia.org (
Januari 2006)