Butter
redeemed: not tied to heart disease
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[July 08, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
Despite decades on the list of “bad” fats
that harm the heart, butter, on its own, is not linked to increased risk
of heart disease after all, according to a recent analysis of existing
research.
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Eating more butter was even weakly tied to a lower risk of diabetes,
the authors found.
Some people hold that butter is a “villain” while others think it is
a superfood of sorts, and this review supports neither argument,
said senior author Dariush Mozaffarian of the Friedman School of
Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University in Boston.
“The findings really suggest butter is neither of those things,
whether you eat a lot or none at all, there’s not a big difference,”
he told Reuters Health.
The authors reviewed nine large studies including a total of more
than 600,000 people who reported what they ate and were followed
over time. Overall, 28,000 people died during the studied periods,
almost 10,000 people developed cardiovascular disease and 24,000
were diagnosed with diabetes.
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Consumption of butter among people in the studies ranged from none
to a tablespoon (14 grams) or more daily.
Researchers found a very small increased risk of dying from any
cause based on how much butter people ate. For every additional
tablespoon, risk rose by 1 percent compared to people who didn’t eat
butter. But that difference is so small it could be due to chance.
Risk for heart attacks, strokes and overall cardiovascular disease
was similar regardless of butter intake, according to the results in
PLoS ONE.
Each additional tablespoon of butter consumed was tied to a 4
percent lower risk of developing diabetes.
“Butter’s net health effect is pretty neutral,” Mozaffarian said.
Other daily dietary choices, like getting enough fruit and
vegetables, may be more important for your health, he said.
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“These results mean that we should not over-emphasize the role of
butter for health, and consider its health effects against the
alternative choices,” said Dr. Nita Forouhi of the University of
Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine in the UK who was not part of
the new research.
Other studies have linked habitual butter intake to higher
low-density-lipoprotein(LDL) cholesterol and potentially with weight
gain over time, Forouhi told Reuters Health by email.
“This finding is not a license to eat all the butter one wants, but
there is no need to single it out as being particularly unhealthy,”
Forouhi said.
“The findings for type 2 diabetes may be real, but they may also be
limited by the complexity of doing this type of research as some
people may selectively under- or over-report or avoid consumption,”
Forouhi said. “Or there might be alternative explanations such as
the other dietary factors that could not be accounted for leading to
what is known as residual confounding. For now, it is best to
consider butter being neutral for diabetes risk.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/29S63Bc PLoS ONE, online June 29, 2016.
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