Researchers followed 48,188 middle-aged adults without any history
of heart attacks or strokes for about 18 years. During this time,
2,820 people developed coronary artery disease that can lead to
heart attacks; 519 people had ischemic strokes, the most common
kind, which occur when a clot blocks an artery carrying blood to the
brain; and 300 people had hemorrhagic strokes, which are caused by a
ruptured blood vessel in the brain.
Vegetarians - including vegans, who avoid eggs and dairy - were 22%
less likely to develop coronary artery disease than meat eaters.
This is the equivalent of 10 fewer cases of artery disease per 1,000
people over a decade among vegetarians compared to meat eaters,
researchers calculated.
However, vegetarians and vegans were 20 percent more likely than
others to have a stroke - particularly a hemorrhagic stroke. This
translates over 10 years to roughly three more strokes per 1,000
people in vegetarians than in meat eaters.
"Both fish eaters and vegetarians had on average lower BMI, and
lower rates of high blood pressure, high blood cholesterol and
diabetes compared with meat eaters, which might explain the lower
risk of heart disease in both fish eaters and vegetarians since
these are all established risk factors for heart disease," said
study leader Tammy Tong, a nutritional epidemiologist at the
University of Oxford in the UK.
"The reason for higher risk of stroke in vegetarians is less clear,
but some recent evidence has suggested that while low cholesterol
levels (are) protective against both heart disease and ischemic
stroke, very low cholesterol levels might be linked to a higher risk
of hemorrhagic stroke, the subtype that was found to be higher in
the vegetarians," Tong said by email.
The elevated stroke risk among vegetarians and vegans was due to 43%
increased odds of a hemorrhagic stroke; there was no meaningful
difference in ischemic stroke rates between this group and meat
eaters.
There also was no meaningful difference in risk of heart attacks
based on eating habits, researchers report in The BMJ.
[to top of second column] |
Researchers assessed eating habits with questionnaires at the start
of the study. Some participants completed questionnaires again an
average of 14 years later.
People who ate meat - regardless of whether they also ate fish,
dairy, or eggs - were classified as meat eaters. Their ranks totaled
24,428 at the start of the study and 96% remained meat eaters based
on the follow-up dietary questionnaires.
Another 7,506 people ate fish, but no meat at the start of the
study, and 57% of these participants who completed the second
dietary questionnaires remained fish eaters.
An additional 16,254 people started out as vegetarians or vegans,
eating no meat or fish, and 73% still abstained based on the
follow-up dietary questionnaires.
"Dietary guidelines recommend increasing our intake of whole
nutritious foods such as fruits and vegetables and reducing intake
of ultra-processed foods and beverages," said Mark Lawrence, a
public health and nutrition researcher at Deakin University in
Melbourne, Australia, who co-authored an editorial accompanying the
study.
"Increasingly, national dietary guidelines around the world are
recognizing plant-based diets for their environmental sustainability
as well as health benefits," Lawrence said by email. "Though,
shifting towards plant-based dietary patterns for reasons of
personal or planetary health does not necessarily mean becoming a
vegetarian."
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2kqZjnN and https://bit.ly/2m2N7K7 The BMJ,
online September 4, 2019.
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