Stroke is the third leading cause
of death in America, affecting nearly one million people and taking the lives
of 150,000 each year. Researchers publishing in the American Heart Association journal
Stroke have found that increased
consumption of white fleshy vegetables and fruits such as apples and pears leads
to a dramatic decline in both incidence and death from a stroke.
This study is the first to
differentiate between different colors in fruits and vegetables and the risk
for developing a specific disease or illness. Beneficial phytochemicals such as
carotenoids and flavonoids found in the white flesh and skin of apples and
pears can dramatically lower your risk of suffering the devastating physical damage
caused by a stroke.
Apples and Pears Can Cut Stroke Risk by More Than Fifty Percent
Nutrition scientists have long
known that the brightly colored skin and flesh of fruits and vegetables confer
the health benefits normally associated with eating these foods. To further
examine this link, researchers examined the relationship between fruit and
vegetable color group consumption and contrasted with 10-year stroke incidence
in a cohort of 20,069 adults, with an average age of 41. Participants were
disease free at the outset of the study and were asked to complete a 178-item
food frequency questionnaire detailing foods consumed over the past year.
Fruit and vegetable consumption
was broken into four distinct groups,
based on pigment color: Green, including dark leafy vegetables, orange/yellow,
mostly citrus fruits, red/purple, mostly red vegetables and white, of which 55
percent were apples and pears. Follow up proceeded for a period of ten years
during which time 233 strokes were confirmed. Green, orange/yellow and
red/purple varieties of fruits and vegetables were found to have no correlation
to stroke incidence.
Fruits and Vegetables of All Colors Needed to Lower Disease Risk
White fleshed fruits and
vegetables demonstrated a 52% lower incidence of stroke over the ten-year
period when those consuming the highest amounts were compared to the group with
the lowest intake. The researchers found that each 25 gram per day increase in
white fruits and vegetable consumption was associated with a 9 percent lower
risk of stroke (the average apple is 120 grams).
The lead study author from
Wageningen University in the Netherlands concluded
“To prevent stroke, it may be useful to
consume considerable amounts of white fruits and vegetables… For example,
eating one apple a day is an easy way to increase white fruits and vegetable
intake.” Apples and pears are high in a nutrient known as quercetin and
fiber that may convey part of the stroke risk reduction. It`s critical to eat a
diet packed with fruits and vegetables of all colors to take advantage of the
unique disease-fighting characteristics to be uncovered for a multitude of
different carotenoids and flavonoids in future research studies.
2 comments:
Very important post, after reading it I will eat much more white fruits and vegetables.
Since bananas are white also and contain potassium, a known stroke preventer, this conclusion is suspect.
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