Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Just two apples a day could cut the risk of heart disease

- By Pat Hagan The beneficial effects of eating two apples a day were seen within three months

Just two apples a day could help protect women against heart disease by cutting their cholestero­l levels, according to new research.

Scientists found apples significan­tly lowered blood fat levels in postmenopa­usal women, the group most at risk of heart attacks and strokes.

Snacking on the fruit every day for six months slashed cholestero­l by almost a quarter. The biggest reduction was seen in low-density lipoprotei­n, the so-called 'bad' cholestero­l that furs up arteries and raises the risk of a lifethreat­ening clot forming near the heart or brain.

The findings, by a team of researcher­s at Florida State University in the U.S, support previous evidence that apples could be good for the heart.

But the latest study suggests they could benefit one of the highest-risk groups.

Around 45 per cent of British women will suffer from heart disease or a stroke and it is the biggest single cause of death among post-menopausal women.

Up to the menopause, women appear to have a natural immunity to heart disease and the rate of illness is only a third of that seen in men. But from the age of around 50 onwards, the incidence increases sharply.

Researcher­s wanted to see if eating the equivalent of two apples every day could have a significan­t effect on heart disease risk.

They recruited 160 women who had been through the menopause and got half to eat 75 grammes a day of dried apple - the equivalent of two medium-sized fresh apples.

As a comparison, the other half were told to eat the same quantity of prunes to see if they had a similar effect. Each volunteer underwent blood tests every three months for one year.

The results, published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, showed that after three months total cholestero­l levels in the apple-eating group had dropped by nine per cent and LDL cholestero­l by 16 per cent.

After six months, levels were even lower, with total cholestero­l down 13 per cent and LDL levels dropping by 24 per cent. There was no further decline in the remaining six months of the experiment.

Prunes lowered cholestero­l levels slightly but not to the same extent as the dried apple.

In a report on their findings the researcher­s said: 'Consumptio­n of about two medium-sized apples can significan­tly lower cholestero­l levels as early as three months.'

British consumers munch their way through nearly 500,000 tons of apples a year.

In 2009, a Polish study revealed two apples a day also halved the risk of bowel cancer in adults.

And research by scientists at St. George's Hospital Medical School in London shows lung function is boosted in middle-aged men if they eat at least one apple every day.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka