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Go Nuts
A number of studies have established a body of evidence linking nut consumption to potential beneficial effects for heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's Disease, and cancer:
Heart Disease: Researchers from Loma Linda
University (California, USA) studied results of 25 nut consumption
trials involving 583 men and women with normal and high cholesterol
levels. Results showed that daily consumption of a small bag (67g) of
nuts reduced total cholesterol by 5.1% and LDL cholesterol by 7.4%.
Eating nuts was also found to reduce triglyceride levels by 10.2% in
participants with blood triglyceride levels of at least 150 mg/dL, but
not in those with lower levels. The benefits of nut consumption were
greatest in those with high baseline LDL cholesterol levels and a low
body mass index (BMI).
A team from Pennsylvania State
University (Pennsylvania, USA) followed a group of 25 men and women
with mildly elevated cholesterol levels, for a five-week period. One
subgroup consumed an “average” American diet [33% total fat, including
11% monunsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) and 5% polyunsaturated fatty
acids (PUFA)] and the other subgroup ate a Macadamia nut-rich diet [33%
total fat, including 18% MUFA and 5% PUFA]. In the group consuming
the macadamia nut-rich diet, the ratio of total cholesterol to HDL
cholesterol decreased (4.60, versus 4.90 in the group following the
American diet). In addition, the macadamia nut-diet group experienced a
decrease in LDL (low-density, or “bad”) cholesterol (3.14 mmol/L,
versus 3.44 mmol/L in the group following the American diet).
Diabetes:
Yale University School of Medicine (Connecticut, USA) researchers
studied 14 women and 10 men, median age 58 years, with type 2 diabetes,
assigning some of them to consume 56 grams of walnuts daily, for 8
weeks. At the conclusion of the study period, the researchers found
significant improvements in the function of the blood vessel lining
(endothelium), with blood flow improved by 2.2% in the group that
consumed walnuts (as compared to 1.2% in the non- supplemented group).
The walnut-enriched diet also increased lowered serum total cholesterol
and low-density lipoprotein.
Researchers from University of
Montreal (Canada) studied whether cashew extracts could improve the
body's response to its own insulin. Examining the impact of leaves,
bark, seeds and apples from cashew trees, native to northeastern Brazil
and other countries of the southern hemisphere, the team found that
only cashew seed extract significantly stimulated blood sugar
absorption by muscle cells, with extracts of other plant parts having
no such effect.
Alzheimer’s Disease: A
team New York State Institute for Basic Research in Developmental
Disabilities (New York, USA) studied the effect of dietary
supplementation of walnuts on the memory, anxiety and learning skills
in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s Disease. The team fed walnuts to the
mice, and observed that mental skills were preserved. In contrast, the
Alzheimer-model mice that were not fed the nuts suffered a dramatic
loss in learning, memory and physical and emotional control.
Texas Woman’s University (Texas, USA) researchers studied 36 healthy
subjects, each of whom either were assigned to an intervention group
consisting of a pistachio diet or a control group. After a two-week
baseline period, an intervention period of four weeks followed in which
the intervention group was provided with 68 grams (about 2 ounces or
117 kernels) of pistachios per day (the control group ate a normal
diet). The researchers observed a significant increase in
energy-adjusted dietary intake of gamma-tocopherol at weeks three and
four in those on the pistachio diet, as compared with those on the
control diet. The similar effect was seen at weeks five and six among
those on the pistachio diet compared with those on the control diet.
For those on the pistachio diet, cholesterol-adjusted serum
gamma-tocopherol was significantly higher at the end of the
intervention period compared to baseline.
Prostate Cancer:
Researchers from the University of California/Davis (California, USA)
fed a diet with whole walnuts to mice that had been genetically
programmed to get prostate cancer. After 18 weeks, the researchers
found that consuming the human equivalent of 2.4 ounces of walnuts per
day resulted in significantly smaller, slower-growing prostate tumors,
as compared to mice consuming the same diet with an equal amount of
fat, but not from walnuts. The team also found that not only was
prostate cancer growth reduced by 30 to 40%, but the mice had lower
blood levels of a particular protein, insulin-like growth factor
(IGF-1), which has been strongly associated with prostate cancer.
Nuts can be part of a heart-healthy diet pattern that may prove to be
key dietary interventions in some of today’s leading diseases. Because
they are calorically dense, enjoy no more than 3 ounces of nuts per day
as part of a balanced diet.