ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Health

Consuming fruits, vegetables can reduce risk for diabetes

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 10 (ANI): A diet rich in fruits and vegetables can reduce your risk of type 2 diabetes, suggests a study.

ANI Nov 10, 2017 10:59 IST googleads

Consuming fruits, vegetables can reduce risk for diabetes

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 10 (ANI): A diet rich in fruits and vegetables can reduce your risk of type 2 diabetes, suggests a study.

Consuming food rich in antioxidants - fruits, vegetables, tea and other hot beverages - has previously been associated with a lower risk of certain cancers and cardiovascular conditions.

An Inserm team (Health across generations, Center of Research in Epidemiology and Population Health, Villejuif, France) has now shown that such a diet is similarly associated with a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes.

The team already suspected there might be a link on the basis of previous studies showing that certain antioxidants, such as vitamins C and E, lycophenes or flavonoids, were associated with a reduction in type 2 diabetes risk.

However, these studies looked only at isolated nutrients, not at the total antioxidant capacity of the diet. The researchers therefore wanted to verify whether overall diet, according to its antioxidant capacity, is associated with diabetes risk.

Using data from the E3N cohort comprising French women recruited from 1990, then aged between 40 and 65 years, they followed 64,223 women from 1993 to 2008, all of whom were free from diabetes and cardiovascular disease at the time of inclusion in the study.

Each participant completed a dietary questionnaire at the beginning of the study, including detailed information on more than 200 different food items. Using this information, together with an Italian database providing the antioxidant capacity of a large number of different foods, the Inserm researchers calculated a score for 'total dietary antioxidant capacity' for each participant.

The group then analysed the associations between this score and the risk of diabetes occurrence during the follow-up period.

The results show that diabetes risk diminished with increased antioxidant consumption up to a level of 15 mmol/day, above which the effect reached a plateau.

Increasing dietary antioxidants to this level could be achieved through eating antioxidant-rich foods such as dark chocolate, tea, walnuts, prunes, blueberries, strawberries or hazelnuts, to name just a few.

Women with the highest antioxidant scores had a reduction in diabetes risk of 27% compared with those with the lowest scores.

'This link persists after taking into account all the other principal diabetes risk factors: smoking, education level, hypertension, high cholesterol levels, family history of diabetes and, above all, BMI, the most important factor', clarifies Francesca Romana Mancini, the first author of this study.

The foods and drinks that contributed the most to a high dietary antioxidant score were fruits and vegetables, tea and red wine (consumed in moderate quantities). The authors excluded coffee from the analysis, despite its high antioxidant levels, because the antioxidants in coffee have already been shown to be associated with reduced type 2 diabetes risk, and might therefore mask the effects of antioxidants from other sources.

'This work complements our current knowledge of the effect of isolated foods and nutrients, and provides a more comprehensive view of the relationship between food and type 2 diabetes' explains Guy Fagherazzi, the lead researcher in charge of diabetes research in the E3N study.

'We have shown that an increased intake of antioxidants can contribute to a reduction in diabetes risk'.

This now raises the question why: 'We know that these molecules counterbalance the effect of free radicals, which are damaging to cells, but there are likely to be more specific actions in addition to this, for example an effect on the sensitivity of cells to insulin. This will need to be confirmed in future studies', concludes Francesca Romana Mancini.

The findings have been published in Diabetologia, the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD). (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Health

The truth about ‘Eating for Two’ explained by doctors

The truth about ‘Eating for Two’ explained by doctors

Health experts warn that interpreting the advice literally can lead to excessive calorie intake, unhealthy weight gain and a higher risk of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM), a condition that affects blood sugar levels during pregnancy.

Read More
Health

Scientists discover reason high altitude protects against diabete

Scientists discover reason high altitude protects against diabete

Living at high altitude appears to protect against diabetes, and scientists have finally discovered the reason. When oxygen levels drop, red blood cells switch into a new metabolic mode and absorb large amounts of glucose from the blood.

Read More
Health

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Scientists solve a major roadblock in cancer cell therapy: Study 

Researchers have found a reliable way to grow helper T cells from stem cells, solving a major challenge in immune-based cancer therapy. Helper T cells act as the immune system's coordinators, helping other immune cells fight longer and harder.

Read More
Health

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

Injection turns sleeping tumour immune cells into cancer fighters

The Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) researchers have developed a way to reprogram immune cells already inside tumours into cancer-killing machines.

Read More
Health

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

High-fat diets give liver cancer a dangerous head start: Study

A high-fat diet does more than overload the liver with fat. New research from MIT shows that prolonged exposure to fatty foods can push liver cells into a survival mode that quietly raises the risk of cancer.

Read More
Health

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

Researchers have decoded rare cancer fighting plant compound

UBC Okanagan researchers have uncovered how plants create mitraphylline, a rare natural compound linked to anti-cancer effects.

Read More
Health

This gut molecule shows remarkable anti-diabetes power: Study

This gut molecule shows remarkable anti-diabetes power: Study

Researchers revealed that the microbial metabolite TMA can directly block the immune protein IRAK4, reducing inflammation and improving insulin sensitivity.

Read More
Health

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

Air pollution may reduce health benefits of exercise: Study

A new study led by researchers at University College London (UCL) shows that chronic exposure to toxic air can significantly diminish the health benefits of regular physical activity.

Read More
Health

Blocking a single protein forces cancer cells to self-destruct

Blocking a single protein forces cancer cells to self-destruct

Researchers uncovered a powerful weakness in lung cancer by shutting down a protein that helps tumours survive stress.

Read More
Health

Single protein rewires leukemia cells to fuel their growth: Study

Single protein rewires leukemia cells to fuel their growth: Study

Researchers at the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Centre have identified a single protein, IGF2BP3, that links these two processes together in leukaemia cells. The protein alters how cells break down sugar, favouring a fast but inefficient energy pathway, while also modifying RNA that helps produce the proteins leukaemia cells need to survive and multiply.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.