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New Study Reveals Treatment For 'Silent Killer' Using Diet, Not Drugs
WASHINGTON -- A new scientific review shows that high blood pressure can be
reduced with diet changes, especially a vegetarian diet. The new report
analyzes the results of published studies and concludes that vegetarian
populations have lower rates of hypertension, "the silent killer." This
report, authored by nutritionist Susan E. Berkow, Ph.D., C.N.S., and Neal D.
Barnard, M.D., is the lead article in the January issue of the peer-reviewed
journal Nutrition Reviews.
Included in the analysis are studies published in top journals such as The
Lancet and The Journal of the American Medical Association. In addition to
the population trends, these studies show that individual patients also
experience the blood pressure-lowering effect of a vegetarian diet.
Vegetarians tend to be slimmer, on average, and that is one reason their
blood pressure is often in the healthy range. Other mechanisms include
vegetarians' higher intake of potassium as well as the tendency of
plant-based foods to modulate blood viscosity. As blood pressure is lowered,
vegetarian populations experience a reduced risk of stroke, heart attack,
and kidney failure
"Many people fear the side effects of blood pressure-lowering drugs, along
with the expense. Our analysis of 80 scientific studies suggests that a
vegetarian diet may be a simple, drug-free treatment for the 'silent
killer,'" says Dr. Berkow, lead author of the study. "My advice to people at
risk for hypertension is to substitute a veggie burger for a hamburger
tonight and have pasta marinara without the meatballs tomorrow. After about
six weeks of such simple changes you might see your blood pressure--and your
body weight--begin to drop." Because high blood pressure is dangerous, the
researchers caution that individuals should see their doctors and assess
whether diet alone is sufficient, or whether drugs are also needed.
Drs. Berkow and Barnard summarized their findings in the article this way:
Randomized clinical trials have shown that BP [blood pressure] is lowered
when animal products are replaced with vegetable products in both
normotensives and hypertensives (5,7,26). The beneficial expected
consequences of a reduction in BP include a reduction in major coronary
events (29). Vegetarians have been shown to have a lower incidence of
coronary heart disease (30), ischemic heart disease and a reduced risk of
ischemic heart disease-related death(31, 32) compared to non-vegetarians.