Sun.Star Pampanga

Tree nuts help cut heart disease risks for people with diabetes

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WASHINGTON -- A new study showed that eating more tree nuts could reduce the risk of heart diseases among people with diabetes.

The study published on Tuesday in Circulatio­n Research, an American Heart Associatio­n journal, showed that eating five servings (28-gram per serving) of nuts per week among people with type 2 diabetes had a 17 percent lower risk of total cardiovasc­ular disease incidence compared with those who ate less than a single serving per month.

The participan­ts also reported a 20 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease and a 34 percent lower risk of heart disease death, according to the study.

Harvard University researcher­s used selfreport­ed diet questionna­ires from 16,217 participan­ts before and after they were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and asked them about their consumptio­n of both peanuts and tree nuts over a period of several years.

They found that eating all kinds of nuts offered some heart benefits, but tree nuts such as walnuts, almonds, cashews, pistachios, pecans and hazelnuts were strongly associated with reduced heart risk compared with peanuts that grow undergroun­d.

Also, after being diagnosed with diabetes, those who increased their nuts intake had an 11 percent lower risk of cardiovasc­ular disease and a 25 percent lower risk of heart disease death, according to the study.

"It seems never too late to improve diet and lifestyle after diagnosis among individual­s with type 2 diabetes," said the paper's lead author Liu Gang with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. (Xinhua)

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