Whole Grains May Help Keep Blood Pressure
in Check
Wed Oct 7, 2009 11:41am EDT
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Eating lots of whole grains could ward off high blood pressure,
according to a study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
In the study, men with
the highest whole-grain consumption were 19 percent less likely to develop high
blood pressure than men who ate the least amount of whole grains.
While refining grains
removes their outer coating, whole grains retain their bran and germ, so they
are richer in many nutrients, Dr. Alan J. Flint of the Harvard School of Public
Health in Boston and his colleagues note in their report.
The most recent US
guidelines recommend that people get at least 3 ounces, or 85 grams, of whole
grains daily, and that they consume at least half of their grains as whole
grains.
There's evidence, the
investigators note, that women who eat more whole grains are less likely to
develop high blood pressure, also called hypertension, but there is less
information on how whole grains might affect men's heart health.
To investigate, Flint
and his team looked at data from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study,
which has followed 51,529 men since 1986, when the study participants were 40
to 75 years old. They looked at a subset of 31,684 men free of hypertension,
cancer, stroke or heart disease at the study's outset. During 18 years of
follow-up, 9,227 of them developed hypertension.
The men in the top fifth
of whole grain consumption, who averaged about 52 grams daily, were 19 percent
less likely than the men in the bottom fifth, who ate an average of about 3
grams of whole grains daily, to develop hypertension during follow-up.
When the researchers
looked at separate components of whole grains, only bran showed an independent
relationship with hypertension risk, with men who consumed the most at 15
percent lower risk of hypertension than men who ate the least. However, the
researchers note, the amount of bran in the men's diet was relatively small
compared to their total intake of whole grain and cereal fiber.
The relationship between
whole grain intake and hypertension risk remained even after accounting for
men's fruit and vegetable intake, use of vitamins, amount of physical activity,
and whether or not they were screened for high cholesterol.
This suggests that the
association was independent of these markers of a healthy lifestyle behavior
pattern. It's possible, the researchers say, that the men who ate more whole
grains gained less weight over time.
The current findings,
Flint and colleagues conclude, "have implications
for future dietary guidelines and for the prevention of hypertension."
SOURCE: American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition, September 2009.