Healthy tips, updates, information and news feeds for patients and families of the Dartmouth Medical Center.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Dark Chocolate and Heart Failure
Dark chocolate may reduce heart failure risk in women.
The Washington Post (8/16, Stein) "The Checkup" blog reported that research published in Circulation: Heart Failure suggests that "eating a little dark chocolate in moderate amounts can be healthful."
The Time (8/16, Park) "Wellness" blog reported that investigators "found that women...who consumed one to two servings of chocolate a week enjoyed a 32% lower risk of heart failure than those who ate no chocolate at all during the nine year trial. The women who indulged a bit less, consuming one to three servings a month, reduced their odds of heart failure by 26%." HealthDay (8/16, Gardner), and MedPage Today (8/16, Phend) also covered the story.
Red meat may be linked to increased heart risks in women. CNN /Health.com (8/17, Gardner) reports that "if you eat red meat more than once a day, cutting back to one serving every other day can substantially reduce your risk of having a heart attack or dying from heart disease," according to a study published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
WebMD (8/16, Hendrick) reported that "scientists examined data on 84,136 women between the ages of 30 and 55 over a 26-year period ending in 2006."
HealthDay (8/16, Reinberg) reported that the researchers "found that women who ate the highest amount of red meat were at the highest risk for heart disease."
According to MedPage Today (8/16, Phend), the researchers found that "a serving of chicken or turkey to replace one of beef, pork, or lamb would lower coronary heart disease risk 19%." HeartWire (8/16, Miller) also covers the story.
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