Moderate consumption of high quality
chocolate linked to lower risk of heart failure
Middle-aged and elderly Swedish women who regularly ate
a small amount of chocolate had lower risks of heart failure risks, in a study
reported in Circulation: Heart Failure, a journal of the American Heart Association.
The nine-year study, conducted among 31,823 middle-aged and elderly Swedish
women, looked at the relationship of the amount of high-quality chocolate the
women ate, compared to their risk for heart failure. The quality of chocolate
consumed by the women had a high-density cocoa content (about 30 percent. In this
study, researchers found:
- Women who ate an average of one to two servings of the high-quality chocolate
per week had a 32 percent lower risk of developing heart failure.
- Those who had one to three servings per month had a 26 percent lower risk.
- Those who consumed at least one serving daily or more didn't appear to benefit
from a protective effect against heart failure.
The lack of a protective effect among women eating chocolate every day is probably
due to the additional calories gained from eating chocolate instead of more nutritious
foods, said Murrray Mittleman, M.D., Dr.P.H., lead researcher of the study.
"You can't ignore that chocolate is a relatively calorie-dense food and
large amounts of habitual consumption is going to raise your risks for weight
gain," said Mittleman, director of the Cardiovascular Epidemiology Research
Unit at Harvard Medical School's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.
"But if you're going to have a treat, dark chocolate is probably a good choice,
as long as it's in moderation."
High concentration of compounds called "flavonoids" in chocolate
may lower blood pressure, among other benefits, according to mostly short-term
studies. However, this is the first study to show long-term outcomes related specifically
to heart failure, which can result from ongoing untreated high blood pressure.
In the observational study, researchers analyzed self-reported food-frequency
questionnaire responses from participants 48-to-83-years-old in the Swedish Mammography
Cohort. Combining the results with data from national Swedish hospitalization
and death registries between 1998 through 2006, the researchers used multiple
forms of statistical modeling to reach their conclusions on heart failure and
chocolate consumption.
Mittleman said differences in chocolate quality affect the study's implications
for Americans. Higher cocoa content is associated with greater heart benefits.
In Sweden, even milk chocolate has a higher cocoa concentration than dark chocolate
sold in the United States.
Although 90 percent of all chocolate eaten across Sweden during the study period
was milk chocolate, it contained about 30 percent cocoa solids. U.S. standards
only require 15 percent cocoa solids to qualify as dark chocolate. So, by comparison,
American chocolate may have fewer heart benefits and more calories and fat per
equivalent amounts of cocoa content compared to the chocolate eaten by the Swedish
women in the study.
Also, the average serving size for Swedish women in the study ranged from 19
grams among those 62 and older, to 30 grams among those 61 and younger. In contrast,
the standard American portion size is 20 grams.
"Those tempted to use these data as their rationale for eating large amounts
of chocolate or engaging in more frequent chocolate consumption are not interpreting
this study appropriately," said Linda Van Horn, Ph.D., R.D., immediate past
chair of the American Heart Association Nutrition Committee and professor in the
Department of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University's Feinberg School
of Medicine in Chicago. "This is not an 'eat all you want' take-home message,
rather it's that eating a little dark chocolate can be healthful, as long as other
adverse behaviors do not occur, such as weight gain or excessive intake of non-nutrient
dense 'empty' calories."
"Anything that helps to decrease heart failure is an important issue worth
examining," Mittleman said.
Co-authors are Elizabeth Mostofsky, M.P.H.; Emily Levitan, Sc.D.; and Alicja
Wolk, Dr.Med.Sci. Author disclosures and funding support are on the manuscript.
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