Cereal grains and legumes in the prevention of coronary heart disease and stroke: a review of the literature

被引:0
|
作者
I Flight
P Clifton
机构
[1] CSIRO Human Nutrition,
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A number of reviewers have examined studies investigating the relationship between coronary heart disease and stroke prior to 2000. Since then, several key studies have been published. Five studies have examined the relationship between wholegrain consumption, coronary heart disease (CHD) and cardiovascular (CVD) disease and found protection for either or both diseases. The researchers concluded that a relationship between wholegrain intake and CHD is seen with at least a 20% and perhaps a 40% reduction in risk for those who eat wholegrain food habitually vs those who eat them rarely. Notwithstanding the fact that fibre is an important component of wholegrains, many studies have not shown an independent effect of fibre alone on CHD events. Thus in terms of CHD prevention, fibre is best obtained from wholegrain sources. Wholegrain products have strong antioxidant activity and contain phytoestrogens, but there is insufficient evidence to determine whether this is beneficial in CHD prevention. Soluble fibre clearly lowers cholesterol to a small but significant degree and one would expect that this would reduce CHD events. There have been a small number of epidemiological studies showing soy consumption is associated with lower rates of heart disease. Countering the positive evidence for wholegrain and legume intake has been the Nurses Health Study in 2000 that showed women who were overweight or obese consuming a high glycaemic load (GL) diet doubled their relative risk of CHD compared with those consuming a low GL diet. Although the literature relating GL with CHD events is somewhat mixed, the relationship with risk factors such as HDL cholesterol, triglyceride and C reactive protein is relatively clear. Thus, carbohydrate-rich foods should be wholegrain and, if they are not, then the lowest glycaemic index (GI) product should be used. Promotion of carbohydrate foods should be focused on wholegrain cereals because these have proven to be associated with health benefits. There is insufficient evidence about whether the addition of other components of wholegrains such as polyphenolics or minerals (such as magnesium or zinc) would improve the health benefits of refined grain foods and this needs investigation. Whether adding bran to refined carbohydrate foods can improve the situation is also not clear, and it was found that added bran lowered heart disease risk in men by 30%. This persisted after full adjustment (including GL) suggesting, at least in men, that fibre may be more important than GI. Thus there are two messages: The intake of wholegrain foods clearly protects against heart disease and stroke but the exact mechanism is not clear. Fibre, magnesium, folate and vitamins B6 and vitamin E may be important.The intake of high GI carbohydrates (from both grain and non-grain sources) in large amounts is associated with an increased risk of heart disease in overweight and obese women even when fibre intake is high but this requires further confirmation in normal-weight women.
引用
收藏
页码:1145 / 1159
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Cereal grains and legumes in the prevention of coronary heart disease and stroke: a review of the literature
    Flight, I.
    Clifton, P.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2006, 60 (10) : 1145 - 1159
  • [2] Cereal grains and coronary heart disease
    Truswell, AS
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, 2002, 56 (01) : 1 - 14
  • [3] Cereal grains and coronary heart disease
    AS Truswell
    European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2002, 56 : 1 - 14
  • [4] Cereal grains, legumes, and weight management: a comprehensive review of the scientific evidence
    Williams, Peter G.
    Grafenauer, Sara J.
    O'Shea, Jane E.
    NUTRITION REVIEWS, 2008, 66 (04) : 171 - 182
  • [5] Potential of cereal grains and grain legumes in modulating pigs' intestinal microbiota - A review
    Aumiller, Tobias
    Mosenthin, Rainer
    Weiss, Eva
    LIVESTOCK SCIENCE, 2015, 172 : 16 - 32
  • [6] THE DISPARITY OF SECONDARY PREVENTION OF STROKE AND CORONARY HEART DISEASE IN CHINA
    Xia, Shijun
    Wang, Chi
    Du, Jing
    Guo, Lizhu
    Du, Xin
    Anderson, Craig S.
    Dong, Jianzeng
    Ma, Changsheng
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2021, 77 (18) : 1493 - 1493
  • [7] SECONDARY PREVENTION OF CORONARY HEART-DISEASE - A REVIEW
    WILHELMSEN, L
    COR ET VASA, 1982, 24 (04) : 216 - 227
  • [8] Trends in Secondary Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease in Tunisia: Prevention of Recurrences of MI and Stroke
    Ben Mansour, N.
    Lassoued, O.
    Saidi, O.
    Aissi, W.
    Ben Ali, S.
    Ben Romdhane, H.
    GLOBAL HEART, 2012, 7 (04) : 361 - 366
  • [9] Heart disease and stroke prevention
    不详
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NURSING, 2002, 102 (02) : 20 - 20
  • [10] Critical review on the intervention effects of flavonoids from cereal grains and food legumes on lipid metabolism
    Huang, Yin
    Xu, Baojun
    FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2025, 464