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Healthy Diet May Prevent
Age-Related Disability
Researchers may have come up with another
reason to eat well. A new study suggests diets rich in fruits,
vegetables and dairy foods can prevent the disabilities that often
come with age.
The study, which followed 9,404
middle-aged Americans for nine years, found that a healthy diet
seemed particularly beneficial among African-American women, who
are generally at greater risk than white women of developing physical
limitations as they age.
Researchers found that African
American women who ate the most fruits and vegetables on a daily
basis were about one-third to one-half less likely than those
with the lowest intakes to develop problems with activities such
as walking, climbing stairs and doing household chores. High intakes
of dairy products such as milk, cheese and yogurt showed an even
stronger protective effect.
Similar benefits were found among
white women -- at least when it came to fruit and vegetable intake
-- though the protective effect was not as great.
The findings are published in the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Diet is well known to be a factor
in a host of diseases, including heart disease, diabetes, some
cancers and the bone-thinning disease osteoporosis. But less is
known about the role of diet in age-related disability, according
to the authors of the new study.
"Getting the recommended number
of servings of dairy, fruits and vegetables should be investigated
for its potential to reduce the prevalence of disability in the
aging population," lead author Dr. Denise Houston said in a statement.
"We know that obesity, lack of
physical exercise, alcohol consumption and smoking are modifiable
factors for disability, but little is known about the role of
diet," added Houston, a research associate at Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Experts recommend that adults eat
two to three servings of low-fat dairy and five to nine servings
of fruits and vegetables each day.
The study included 9,404 African-American
and white men and women between the ages of 45 and 64 at the outset.
At study entry, they completed diet questionnaires that asked
how often they ate various foods.
After roughly nine years, 67 percent
of the African American women had developed problems with walking,
climbing steps, kneeling or other types of lower-limb movement.
White men were the least likely to have such problems, with 37
percent reporting lower-limb limitations. African American women
also had the highest rates of other types of disabilities, such
as difficulty with household chores or basic needs like getting
around the house or out of bed.
However, African American women
with the highest level of fruits, vegetables and dairy products
in their diets were much less likely than their peers to develop
any disability.
According to Houston's team, a
healthy diet may ward off physical limitations in a number of
ways. The calcium and vitamin D in dairy foods may prevent problems
associated with osteoporosis and declines in muscle strength.
Fruits and vegetables are rich
in antioxidants, nutrients that counter the potentially cell-damaging
effects of oxygen free radicals -- substances that are normal
byproducts of metabolism and that, over time, can lead to cumulative
damage in body tissue.
Exactly why a healthy diet was
more protective in African American women than in white women
is unclear. The finding, Houston and her colleagues note, could
reflect differences in the types of produce or dairy products
that African American and white women eat. For example, African
Americans have been shown eat more dark green vegetables and get
more vitamin A and C than white Americans do.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, February 2005.
Reference
Source 89
March
7, 2005
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