Women who follow blood pressure-lowering
diet have reduced risk for heart failure
A diet designed to prevent and treat high blood pressure
also may be associated with a lower risk of heart failure among women, according
to a report in the May 11 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Dietary patterns have been associated with risk factors
for heart failure, but little is known about whether food choices can prevent
or delay the condition, according to background information in the article. "The
Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet may contribute to prevention
of heart failure in some cases because it effectively reduced blood pressure and
low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in clinical trials," the authors write.
"This diet features high intake of fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy products
and whole grains, resulting in high potassium, magnesium, calcium and fiber consumption,
moderately high protein consumption and low total and saturated fat consumption."
Emily B. Levitan, Sc.D., of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center, Boston, and colleagues analyzed data from 36,019 women ages 48 to 83 without
heart failure who were participating in the Swedish Mammography Cohort. Participants
completed a food frequency questionnaire at the beginning of the study, between
1997 and 1998, that was used to calculate a score indicating how closely their
diets matched DASH guidelines. The women were followed up from 1998 through 2004
using Swedish databases of hospitalizations and deaths.
During the seven-year follow-up, 443 women developed
heart failure, including 415 who were hospitalized and 28 who died of the condition.
Compared with the one-fourth of women with the lowest DASH diet scores, the one-fourth
of women with the highest DASH diet scores had a 37 percent lower rate of heart
failure after factors such as age, physical activity and smoking were considered.
Women whose scores placed them in the top 10 percent had half the rate of heart
failure compared with the one-fourth who had the lowest scores.
Previous studies have shown that the DASH diet lowers
systolic blood pressure by about 5.5 millimeters of mercury, a decrease that might
be expected to reduce the rate of heart failure by about 12 percent, the authors
note. Other mechanisms by which this eating pattern may influence heart failure
risk include the reduction of LDL cholesterol, estrogen-like effects of some of
the nutrients in the diet and a decrease in oxygen-related cell damage.
"In conclusion, greater consistency with the DASH diet
as measured using food-frequency questionnaires was associated with lower rates
of heart failure in middle-aged and elderly women living in Sweden," the authors
write.
Maintenance of the cohort was provided by grants from
the Swedish Research Council/Committee for Infrastructure. This study was supported
by a grant from the Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research
and Higher Education and by a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
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