The Scotsman

Vegan and vegetarian diets found to reduce heart disease but raise risk of strokes

- By JANE KIRBY

Vegan and vegetarian diets are linked to a lower risk of heart disease but may increase the risk of stroke, experts say.

A study from the University of Oxford found that people who follow the diets have a 22 per cent lower risk of heart disease than meat eaters, while those who eat fish but no meat have a 13 per cent reduced risk.

However, researcher­s found that vegetarian­s and vegans were a fifth more likely to suffer a stroke than meat eaters, which they suggest maybe partly due to a lack of vitamins.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal, included data for 48,188 people with no history of heart disease or stroke at the star t of the study.

The group was split into meat-eaters (24,428 people), fish-eaters who consumed fish but no meat (7,506 people ), and vegetarian­s and vegans (16,254 people).

Over a follow-up of 18 years, 2,820 cases of ischaemic heart disease and 1,072 cases of stroke were recorded among the overall group. After adjusting for factors that might influence the results, researcher­s found that fish eaters had a 13 per cent reduced risk of heart disease compared with meat eaters, while vegetarian­s and vegans had a 22 per cent lower risk.

This was equivalent to 10 fewer cases of ischaemic heart disease in vegetarian­s and vegans than in meat eaters per 1,000 people over 10 years.

The researcher­s said: “We observed lower rates of ischaemic heart disease in fish eaters and vegetarian­s than in meat eaters, which appears to be at least partly due to lower body mass index and lower rates of high blood pressure, high blood cholestero­l and diabetes associated with these diets.”

But the study found 20 per cent higher rates of stroke in vegetarian­s and vegans than in meat eaters, equivalent to three more cases of stroke per 1,000 people over 10 years.

This was mostly due to a higher rate of haemorrhag­ic stroke–the type caused by bleeding in or around the brain.

The team said the increased risk of stroke could be down to lower levels of vitamins among the vegetarian­s and vegans in the study.

They said further inv es tigation was needed, adding: “Vegetarian­s and vegans (in the study) have lower circulatin­g levels of several nutrients (eg, vitamin B12, vitamin D, essential amino acids, and long chain n-3 polyunsatu­rated fatty acids), and difference­s in some of these nutritiona­l factors could contribute to the observed associatio­ns.”

Researcher­s also suggested that low blood levels of total cholestero­l among vegetarian­s and vegans may play a role.

They added :“Vegetarian and vegan diets have become increasing­ly popular in recent years, partly due to perceived health benefits, as well as concerns about the environmen­t and animal welfare.

“In the United Kingdom, both the representa­tive National Diet and Nutrition Survey 2008-12 and a 2016 Ipso sM OR I survey estimated about 1.7 million vegetarian sand vegans living in the country.”

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