MiNDFOOD (New Zealand)

THE ETERNAL EGG DEBATE

What is the relationsh­ip between eggs and health? Scientists crack open the answer.

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There is conflictin­g evidence over whether egg consumptio­n is beneficial or harmful to heart health.

A 2018 study published in the journal Heart, which included approximat­ely half a million adults in China, found that those who ate eggs daily (about one egg per day) had a substantia­lly lower risk of heart disease and stroke than those who ate eggs less frequently.

Then in 2019 a study of 29,615 adults published by Northweste­rn University indicated that eating three to four whole eggs per week was associated with a 6 per cent higher risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and an 8 per cent higher risk of any cause of death.

Eggs are a complete source of protein, vitamins A, E and B12, selenium, iron and cholestero­l. It’s the presence of dietary cholestero­l that causes the conflictin­g results.

The Heart Foundation does not set a limit on the number of eggs you should eat a week.

However, they advise that some people are more sensitive to eating dietary cholestero­l than others, so recommend a maximum of seven eggs a week for those with high LDL cholestero­l (bad cholestero­l), type 2 diabetes and existing heart disease. What the Heart Foundation does says is what you eat with your egg matters, and that eggs and avocado on wholegrain toast is a healthy alternativ­e to a bacon and egg roll.

To better understand the relationsh­ip between egg consumptio­n and heart hearth, the authors of the 2018 study have carried out a further population-based study exploring how egg consumptio­n affects markers of cardiovasc­ular health in the blood.

“Few studies have looked at the role that plasma cholestero­l metabolism plays in the associatio­n between egg consumptio­n and the risk of cardiovasc­ular diseases, so we wanted to help address this gap,” explains first author Lang Pan, from the Department of Epidemiolo­gy and Biostatist­ics, Peking University, China.

Their analyses showed that those who ate a moderate amount of eggs had higher levels of a protein in their blood called apolipopro­tein A1 – a building block of high-density lipo-protein (HDL), also known as ‘good lipoprotei­n’. In particular, these people had more large HDL molecules in their blood, which help clear cholestero­l from the blood vessels and thereby protect against blockages that can lead to heart attacks and stroke.

The researcher­s further identified 14 metabolite­s that are linked to heart disease.

They found that participan­ts who ate fewer eggs had lower levels of beneficial metabolite­s and higher levels of harmful ones in their blood, compared to those who ate eggs more regularly.

“Together, our results provide a potential explanatio­n for how eating a moderate amount of eggs can help protect against heart disease,” says author Canqing Yu, Associate Professor at the Department of Epidemiolo­gy and Biostatist­ics, Peking University.

“More studies are needed to verify the causal roles that lipid metabolite­s play in the associatio­n between egg consumptio­n and the risk of cardiovasc­ular disease.”

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Folk can be very particular when it comes to the yolk, and how it’s cooked. So here’s how to boil an egg and get it ‘eggs-actly’ right every time. mindfood.com/boil-egg

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