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Eating Fruits And Vegetables
May Cut Arthritis Risk
Drinking a glass of orange juice a day may help stave off arthritis,
new research suggests. Certain carotenoids, compounds commonly
found in some fruits and vegetables, appear to be responsible.
The findings from previous studies have suggested
that dietary carotenoids, the chemicals responsible for the orange
and yellow coloring of fruits and vegetables, can reduce inflammation
through antioxidant effects.
Dr. Alan J. Silman, from The University of Manchester in the
UK, and colleagues analyzed data from a study of more than 25,000
subjects to investigate the association between dietary carotenoids
and arthritis risk. Between 1993 and 2001, the subjects were followed
to assess the occurrence of arthritis affecting multiple joints.
The researchers' findings appear in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition.
Eighty-eight subjects developed arthritis during follow-up and
they were matched to 176 healthy comparison subjects.
Average daily intakes of the carotenoids beta-cryptoxanthin and
zeaxanthin were 40 and 20 percent lower, respectively, for arthritis
patients compared with healthy subjects. By contrast, consumption
of two other well-known carotenoids, lutein and lycopene, did
not seem to protect against arthritis.
Further analysis showed that subjects with the highest beta-cryptoxanthin
and zeaxanthin intake were about half as likely to develop inflammatory
polyarthritis than those with the lowest intake.
"These data add to a growing body of evidence that some dietary
antioxidants, such as the carotenoids beta-cryptoxanthin and zeaxanthin
as well as vitamin C, may be protective against the development
of" arthritis, the authors conclude.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, August 2005.