Olive Oil Reduces Blood Pressure
November 5, 2004
Consumption of olive oil is inversely associated with
blood pressure, report Greek researchers, revealing an additional factor behind
its protective effect on heart health.
Olive oil has also been shown to have a beneficial
effect on blood lipids but the new study, reported in the October issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (vol 80, no 4, 1012-1018),
suggests that it may act in a number of ways to protect people from heart
disease.
There is already considerable evidence to indicate that
the Mediterranean diet reduces cardiovascular mortality but the new study looks
at one of the major risk factors of heart disease.
About two thirds of strokes and half the incidence of
heart disease are attributable to raised blood pressure, according to the World
Health Organisation. Worldwide, high blood pressure is estimated to cause 7.1
million deaths, about 13 per cent of the total and about 4.4 per cent of the
total chronic disease burden.
The food industry is coming under increasing pressure
to tackle the rising burden of heart disease, using heart healthy ingredients to
target at-risk consumers. Food and drinks for heart health were worth ₤100.7
million during 2002 in the UK alone, according to Datamonitor statistics that
predict this figure will rise to ₤145.1 million by 2007.
The researchers from the University of Athens Medical
School, Harvard School of Public Health and Sotiria Hospital in Athens recorded
arterial blood pressure and other variables like sociodemographic, dietary and
physical activity, among participants in the Greek arm of the European
Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study.
Of these participants, 20,343 had never received a
diagnosis of hypertension. The analysis was based on a score that reflects
adherence to the Mediterranean diet and, alternatively, the individual
components and olive oil.
The Mediterranean diet score was significantly
inversely associated with both systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Intakes of
olive oil, vegetables, and fruit were significantly inversely associated with
both systolic and diastolic blood pressure, whereas cereals, meat and meat
products, and alcohol intake were positively associated with arterial blood
pressure.
Mutual adjustment between olive oil and vegetables,
which are frequently consumed together, indicated that olive oil has the
dominant beneficial effect on arterial blood pressure in this population,
concluded the authors.
"Olive oil intake is inversely associated with both
systolic and diastolic blood pressure," Professor Dimitrios Trichopoulos, author
and consulting epidemiologist at the University of Athens. "It was not a
striking difference but it was statistically significant."
However he added that the mechanism for this action is
not yet well understood. "The main component of olive oil is monounsaturated fat
but it also has hundreds of microcomponents."
A recent study at the Second University of Naples,
Italy, demonstrated that a Mediterranean-style diet had beneficial effects on
people with the metabolic syndrome - decreasing blood pressure as well as body
weight, levels of glucose, insulin, total cholesterol, and triglycerides and
causing a significant increase in levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol
or 'good cholesterol.'
The Greek researchers will next investigate whether the
Mediterranean diet has beneficial effects on people who already have coronary
heart disease.
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