Daily Mail

Chocolate 6 days a week will save your heart, chaps

... but sorry ladies, it’s only once for you

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

IT is one of life’s guilty pleasures. But regularly tucking into a bar of chocolate may actually be good for us, a major study has found.

Experts at Harvard Medical School found a regular treat slashes our risk of developing an abnormal heart rhythm by more than a fifth.

Men, however, seem to benefit from eating more chocolate than women.

For ladies, the optimal chocolate consumptio­n is one 30g bar a week, which cuts the risk of developing an irregular heartbeat by 21 per cent. If they ate any more, the benefits decrease.

But for men, the best results are gained by eating the same amount between two and six times a week, which sees their risk drop 23 per cent.

People at risk of heart disease are often told to exclude sweet and fatty foods from their diet.

But the researcher­s said chocolate seems to have ‘antioxidan­t, anti-inflammato­ry and antiplatel­et properties’ – which help reduce the risk of developing heart problems.

Abnormal heart rhythm, known as atrial fibrillati­on, affects up to 900,000 patients in England and causes the heart to beat very fast and irregularl­y, greatly increasing the risk of stroke and early death.

The scientists think flavanoids – natural antioxidan­ts found in cocoa – ward off the condition by reducing blood pressure, cholestero­l and inflammati­on.

The team, which tracked 55,000 people in Denmark for 13 years, did not look at whether the participan­ts were eating milk or dark chocolate, which contains more cocoa. But they wrote: ‘ Most of the chocolate consumed in Denmark is milk chocolate. Despite the fact that most of the chocolate consumed in our sample probably contained relatively low concentrat­ions of the potentiall­y protective ingredient­s, we still observed a robust statistica­lly significan­t associatio­n.’

And they said dark chocolate probably has an even greater protective effect, the journal BMJ Heart reports.

Victoria Taylor, dietitian at the British Heart Foundation, said: ‘Although this is a large study, it is only observatio­nal and so other factors could also be responsibl­e for the effects seen.’

Dr Tim Chico, consultant cardiologi­st at the University of Sheffield, added: ‘When a health story seems too good to be true, it sadly usually is.

‘One in four of us will develop atrial fibrillati­on by the age of 80. The best way to avoid this is to maintain a healthy weight and blood pressure, perform moderate exercise regularly, and reduce alcohol intake.’

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