High-protein diet lowers blood pressure too

Eating high-levels of certain proteins found in meat and plant-based foods can lower blood pressure


Ians August 28, 2015
Eating high-levels of certain proteins found in meat and plant-based foods can lower blood pressure. PHOTO: DAILYMAIL

Eating high-levels of certain proteins found in meat and plant-based foods can lower blood pressure and arterial stiffness leading to better heart health, a study has found.

Read: Exercise and diet control can prevent gestational diabetes

Eating foods rich in amino acids - building blocks of proteins - could be as good for your heart as stopping smoking or physical exercise - researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) found.

“Increasing intake from protein-rich foods such as meat, fish, dairy produce, beans, lentils, broccoli and spinach could be an important and readily achievable way to reduce people's risk of cardiovascular disease,” explained lead researcher Dr Amy Jennings from UEA's Norwich Medical School.

This research shows a protective effect of several amino acids on cardiovascular health.

The magnitude of the association is similar to those previously reported for lifestyle risk factors including salt intake, physical activity, alcohol consumption and smoking.

Researchers investigated the effect of seven amino acids on cardiovascular health among almost 2,000 healthy women.

They found strong evidence that those who consumed the highest amounts of amino acids had lower measures of blood pressure and arterial stiffness.

The food source was important. A higher intake of amino acids from plant-based sources was associated with lower blood pressure and a higher intake from animal sources associated with lower levels of arterial stiffness.

“Beneficial daily amounts equate to a 100 gram salmon fillet or a 500 ml glass of skimmed milk," Jennings added in a paper appeared in the Journal of Nutrition.

The finding that eating certain meat and plant proteins are linked to healthier blood pressure is an exciting finding.

Read: Why diet foods don't satisfy us

“We need to understand the mechanism to see if it is direct or via our gut microbes,” said professor Tim Spector from the department of Twin Research at King's College London.

COMMENTS (2)

Jim Savarese | 9 years ago | Reply I'm with Teddy bear. Eat a whole foods starch based plant based diet (drmcdougall.com for example, where everything you need is free). The study indicates what high protein might do. There is no other diet documented to reverse heart disease other than a plant based whole food diet (see Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease by Caldwell Esselstyn). There are other sources of this information as well, Neal Barnard, Colin Campbell, Pam Popper, etc . . . ) Stop reading half baked information from the media. End your struggle for weight loss and health once and for all and eat bean burritios, lentil tacos, pasta and marinara, rice and beans or rice and vegetables, cheeseless whole grain pizzas. Leave the animal products and vegetable oils out of your life and be healthier, happier, stronger, faster and better than you've ever been. Eat like 80% of the rest of the population of the world that has none of America's chronic disease, like heart disease, cancer, diabetes, autoimmune diseases like arthritis and lupus.
Teddy bear | 9 years ago | Reply Plant based diet rocks. Meats clog arteries and full of unhealthy enzymes. Do yourself a favor and increase vegetables and fruit intake along with nuts, legumes, lentils and whole grain unbleached roti/breads. Meat in small amounts once or twice a week.
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