Mediterranean diet may trim diabetes
risk
Older adults who stick with a traditional
Mediterranean diet rich in plant-based fats may help
lower their risk of type 2 diabetes -- even without
counting calories or shedding weight, new research
hints.
In a study of 418 older Spanish adults,
researchers found that those instructed to follow a
Mediterranean diet were less likely to develop diabetes
over four years than those instructed to follow a low-fat
diet -- about 10 percent developed the disease, versus 18
percent in the low-fat group. And weight loss did not
appear necessary to gain the benefit.
The findings, reported in the journal Diabetes
Care, may sound too good to be true.
But they back up previous work by the same
researchers showing that the Mediterranean diet, even
without weight loss, appeared to curb the risk of
metabolic syndrome -- a collection of risk factors for
diabetes that includes abdominal obesity, high blood
pressure and elevated blood sugar and
triglycerides.
However, even if the eating pattern brings
benefits in the absence of weight loss, that does not
negate the importance of regular exercise or
calorie-consciousness, according to a spokesperson for the
American Dietetic Association. Instead, the findings
support existing dietary advice for people with diabetes
and those at risk of the disease.
The traditional Mediterranean diet is generally
high in vegetables, fiber-rich grains, legumes, fish and
plant-based sources of unsaturated fat -- particularly
olive oil and nuts -- while being low in red meat and
high-fat dairy, prime sources of saturated
fat.
All of those features are healthy choices for
anyone.
Researchers are quick to point out that the
study does not, by any means, say that you don't have to
exercise, nor does it mean that calories are
unimportant.
For the study, researchers followed 418
initially diabetes-free adults between the ages of 55 and
80. Each had at least three risk factors for heart
disease, such as high blood pressure, smoking or excess
weight.
At the outset, the men and women were randomly
assigned to follow one of three diets: a traditional
Mediterranean diet with added emphasis on boosting
consumption of olive oil, a rich source of
monounsaturated fat; the same diet, with a focus on
getting polyunsaturated fats from nuts; or a low-fat diet
that encouraged cutting down on all types of
fat.
In addition, participants in the olive-oil
group were given a free allotment of the oil (a liter per
week), and those in the nut group were given enough mixed
nuts to have about an ounce per day.
None of the groups were told to limit calories
or get more exercise.
Over the next four years, the researchers found
10 percent to 11 percent of participants in the two
Mediterranean groups developed diabetes. That compared
with 18 percent of those in the low-fat diet
group.
When the researchers accounted for a number of
other factors -- such as participants' weight, smoking
history and reported exercise levels -- the
Mediterranean diet itself was
linked to 52 percent reduction in diabetes risk compared
with the low-fat diet.
Moreover, both Mediterranean diet groups showed
a lower diabetes risk over time without evidence that
weight loss was the reason. When comparing participants
who did or did not develop diabetes, the researchers
found that average weight and exercise levels were the
same in the two groups at the end of the
study.
In contrast, participants in the low-fat group
who remained diabetes-free did lose a few pounds, on
average. But those who eventually developed diabetes
gained a few pounds, on average.
The findings support the idea that components
of the Mediterranean diet have health benefits
independent of any effects on weight. Past research in
this same study group found that participants on the diet
had improvements in blood sugar levels and sensitivity to
blood-sugar-regulating hormone insulin -- in the absence
of weight loss.
In addition, the researchers note, the
unsaturated fats in the Mediterranean diet are thought to
have anti-inflammatory effects. Researchers believe that
chronic, low-level inflammation in the body may have a
role in a number of disease processes, including those
underlying diabetes.
Researchers agreed that the diet's
anti-inflammatory effects may help explain its health
benefits. But she also pointed out that for overweight
individuals, shedding excess pounds can curb inflammation
as well. Exercise, meanwhile, can have numerous health
benefits, including a reduced risk of heart
disease.
So calorie control and regular exercise should
remain goals.
They also cautioned against seeing olive oil,
or any single component of the Mediterranean diet, as a
magic bullet.
Sometimes individuals can get hung up on one
item, like olive oil, but what we're talking about here
is an overall eating pattern, and an overall
lifestyle.
|