Vegetable Protein Lowers Blood Pressure
Latest High Blood Pressure News
Amino Acid in Vegetables May Lower High
Blood Pressure
By
Jennifer Warner
WebMD Health News
Reviewed By
Louise Chang, MD
July 6, 2009 - A new study shows that an amino acid known as glutamic acid,
which is found in greater amounts in vegetable protein, is associated with lower
blood pressure.
This builds on other research linking higher intake of vegetable protein to
lower blood pressure.
Researchers say the finding may also help explain in
more detail why the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet works at lowering high blood
pressure. The DASH diet is low in
sodium and high in vegetables, whole grains,
and beans, which are also rich sources of vegetable protein.
Amino acids are the building blocks of protein, and glutamic acid was the
most common amino acid found in the study. It accounted for 23% of the protein
in people who were mainly vegetable protein eaters, and 18% in who were mainly
animal protein eaters.
How Vegetables Help Heart
In the study, researchers analyzed data from 4,680
middle-age people participating in an international population study on the
effects of dietary nutrients on high blood pressure. Participants were from the U.S., U.K., China,
and Japan.
The results, published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart
Association, showed that a nearly 5% higher intake of glutamic acid as a percent
of total protein in the diet was linked to lower average blood pressure.
Systolic blood pressure was lower by an average of 1.5 to 3.0 points and
diastolic blood pressure was lower by 1.0 to 1.6 points.
Systolic blood pressure is the top number in a blood pressure reading and
refers to the force when the heart contracts. Diastolic blood pressure is the
lower number in a blood pressure reading and refers to the pressure when the
heart is at rest.
Small Reduction, Big Impact
Although the reduction associated with the vegetable protein component was
relatively small, researchers say even a small reduction can make a big
difference to the health of people with high blood pressure.
"It is estimated that reducing a population's average
systolic blood pressure by 2 [points] could cut stroke death rates by 6 percent and reduce mortality from
coronary heart disease by 4 percent," says researcher Jeremiah Stamler, MD,
professor emeritus in the Feinberg School of Medicine at Northwestern University
in Chicago, Ill, in a news release.
The American Heart Association estimates that a 6% reduction in 2009 stroke
deaths would be equivalent to saving 8,600 people, and a 4% reduction in heart
disease deaths would save 17,800 lives per year.
Stamler says these results apply only to dietary sources of glutamic acid and
there is no information on the potential effects of glutamic acid dietary
supplements.
SOURCES:
Stamler, J. Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association. July
6, 2009; vol 120.
News release, American Heart Association.
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