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Eating Breakfast May
Stave Off Obesity, Diabetes
Excerpt by
Keith Mulvihill,
Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) -
The next time you're starting the day on an empty stomach, consider
this: a new study suggests that people who eat breakfast daily
may be less likely to succumb to obesity and diabetes.
The study was presented Thursday
at the American Heart Association's 43rd Annual Conference on
Cardiovascular Disease Epidemiology and Prevention.
"In comparison to those who reported
eating breakfast twice per week or less often, those reporting
eating breakfast every day had 35 percent to 50 percent lower
rates of developing obesity and insulin resistance syndrome,"
researcher Dr. Mark A. Pereira told Reuters Health.
Insulin resistance is a loss of
sensitivity to insulin, the key blood-sugar-regulating hormone.
This loss of sensitivity is often a precursor to diabetes.
"This was true for white men and
women, and black men, but not black women," he added.
Breakfast may reduce the risk of
obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease by controlling
appetite and thus reducing the likelihood of overeating later
in the day, explained the investigator.
"There were 2,681 young adults
included in the study, and they were followed for eight years,"
said Pereira, who is a research associate at Children's Hospital
and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School in Boston. The
participants, who were between 25 and 37 years old, were followed
for a variety of health outcomes including insulin resistance
and obesity.
"In addition to breakfast frequency,
the quality of breakfast also appears to be important," noted
Pereira. "For example, whole grain breakfast cereals were associated
with a reduction in risk, whereas refined grain breakfast cereals
were not."
Only cereals that list a whole
grain or bran first in the ingredient list or those that contain
a whole grain and have at least 2 grams of fiber per serving are
considered to be whole grain cereal, according to a statement
from the American Heart Association.
"The study contributes to the knowledge
of the role of dietary patterns and risk of obesity and related
health outcomes," concluded Pereira, who added that "there are
very few, if any, longitudinal studies on breakfast frequency,
breakfast quality, and health outcomes."
The study was funded by the Charles
H. Hood Foundation, which Pereira said was "a philanthropic organization
with no ties to industry." The study was also funded by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of
Health.
Reference
Source 89
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