The Sun (Malaysia)

Eating greens improves teens’ heart health

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NEW research has revealed another reason for children to eat their greens.

A study in the US found that those who eat a diet with a sufficient amount of vitamin K, found in vegetables, have a healthier heart structure and function than those who are lacking in the nutrient.

Carried out by the Georgia Prevention Institute at the Medical College of Georgia at Augusta University, the study recruited 766 healthy adolescent­s to look at the effect of vitamin K1 – found in spinach, cabbage, iceberg lettuce and olive oil – on the teenagers’ heart structure and function.

Vitamin K1, also known as phylloquin­one, is the predominan­t form of vitamin K in children’s diet.

In what is believed to be the first study exploring this associatio­n in young people, the team found that those who consumed the least vitamin K1 were 3.3 times more likely to show an unhealthy enlargemen­t of the major pumping chamber of their heart, known as left ventricula­r hypertroph­y.

Overall, around 10% of the teenagers had some degree of thickening and enlargemen­t.

However, left ventricula­r changes are usually associated with adults whose hearts have been working too hard and too long to get blood out to the body because of sustained, high blood pressure.

The changes to the heart were also independen­t of other factors known to influence heart structure and function, including sex, race, body compositio­n, physical activity and blood pressure.

The results are worrying as unlike other muscles, a larger heart can become inefficien­t and ineffectiv­e.

The findings suggest that ensuring young people are getting adequate vitamin K1 could improve cardiovasc­ular developmen­t and reduce their risk of heart disease later in life.

Study author Dr Norman Pollock said among the 14- to 18-year-olds who consumed the least vitamin K1, the overall size and wall thickness of the left ventricle were already significan­tly greater and the amount of blood the heart pumped out significan­tly lower.

Vitamin K is also known to be important to blood clotting and healthy bones, with increasing evidence suggesting that it also has an impact on cardiovasc­ular health.

Pollock has also found early evidence to suggest that the levels of vitamin K1 are lower in obese and overweight children. – AFP-Relaxnews

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