DASH Hypertension Diet Also Lowers Cholesterol, Finds
New NHLBI-Funded Study
An eating plan known to lower blood pressure also significantly lowers blood
cholesterol levels, according to results of a study supported by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health.
Scientists have found that the
DASH
(Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) diet significantly reduces the
levels of total cholesterol and of low-density lipoprotein (LDL), or "bad"
cholesterol.
Compared to those on a control diet, which reflected a typical American's eating
habits, individuals on the DASH eating plan reduced on average their levels of
total cholesterol by 13.7 mg/dL or 7.3 percent, and their levels of LDL
cholesterol by 10.7 mg/dL or 9 percent. The findings are published in the July
2001 issue of the "American Journal of Clinical Nutrition".
"Studies have proven the DASH diet to be beneficial for individuals with high
blood pressure or those wishing to prevent high blood pressure. These latest
findings provide strong evidence that individuals with high blood cholesterol
can also benefit significantly from this eating plan," commented NHLBI director
Dr. Claude Lenfant. "Physicians and their patients with heart disease can add
the DASH diet to the armament of tools known to help lower a person's risk of
coronary heart disease."
In the DASH study, 459 participants were randomly assigned to either the control
diet, a diet enriched with fruits and vegetables, or the DASH eating plan. The
DASH diet was also rich in vegetables and fruit, but was low in saturated and
total fat, and cholesterol and used low-fat dairy products. Both the fruits and
vegetables diet and the DASH eating plan were higher in fiber and lower in
sucrose than the control diet.
Levels of triglycerides, which may increase heart disease risk, were not
significantly changed in participants on the DASH diet. DASH was associated,
however, with an average decrease of 3.7 mg/dL, or 7.5 percent, of levels of
high- density lipoprotein (HDL), the "good" cholesterol. HDL at low levels (less
than 40 mg/dL) is a CHD risk factor; at high levels (60 mg/dL or above), HDL is
considered protective of heart disease. The drop was directly related to the
individual's starting level of HDL; thus, HDL concentrations decreased more in
people with higher HDL levels compared to individuals with lower levels. The
researchers report that although this undesirable response to the DASH diet
needs further study, overall, "the DASH diet affects coronary heart disease (CHD)
risk favorably."
The DASH research group observed that the DASH diet reduced blood cholesterol
and LDL levels by the same amount in African Americans as in whites. They also
found that changes in HDL and triglyceride levels between men and women were
similar. Total and LDL cholesterol levels, however, fell significantly more in
men than in women: on average, total cholesterol levels were reduced by 10.3 mg/dL
more in men than in women, and LDL levels were reduced by 11.2 mg/dL more in men
than in women. Other, smaller studies comparing men and women's lipid response
to diet have yielded mixed results -- some have indicated no differences between
men and women and others have indicated a more favorable response by men.
"The size of the DASH study provided an unprecedented opportunity to look at how
the different sexes and races respond to dietary changes with regard to their
blood cholesterol, or lipid levels," said Dr. Eva Obarzanek, NHLBI Project
Officer of the DASH study. "In addition, we found that the DASH eating plan,
which is low in saturated fat and cholesterol and high in fiber, is one kind of
approach that individuals can use in making the therapeutic lifestyle changes,
or TLC, that are recommended in the new
National
Cholesterol Education Program guidelines for lowering cholesterol levels."
Findings
that the DASH diet significantly lowers blood pressure were published in the
April 17, 1997, issue of the "New England Journal of Medicine". A subsequent
analysis found that DASH also lowers the level of the
amino acid
homocysteine, a substance that has been related to heart disease risk. In
addition, the
DASH-Sodium study recently showed that low-sodium versions of the DASH diet
were more effective at further reducing blood pressure than a regular, low
sodium diet -- in some cases yielding results similar to those achieved through
a single hypertension medication.
The DASH study was conducted at four sites and a coordinating center: Brigham
and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA; The Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore, MD; Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton
Rouge, LA; and Duke University Medical Center in Durham, NC. The DASH
Coordinating Center is at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research in
Portland, OR.
For more information or to arrange an interview with Dr. Obarzanek, please call
the NHLBI Communications Office at 301-496-4236.
NHLBI press releases and other materials are available online at
www.nhlbi.nih.gov.
Additional information can be found using the hyperlinks
or by following the navigation directions provided below.
Healthy
Eating and the DASH Diet
From the NHLBI home page, select: Special Web Pages, then High Blood Pressure.
Click on Prevention, then Healthy Eating.
National
Cholesterol Education Program guidelines for lowering cholesterol levels
From the NHLBI home page, select the category Clinical Guidelines.
Dietary Approach
Significantly Lowers Blood Pressure (news release)
From the NHLBI home page, select: News and Press Releases, then scroll down to
the April 16, 1997 news release.
Blood
Pressure-Lowering DASH Diet Also Reduces Homocysteine (news release)
From the NHLBI home page, select: News and Press Releases, then scroll down to
the August 21, 2000 news release.
Reducing Sodium Leads
to Substantial Drop in Blood Pressure, Finds NHLBI Study (news release)
From the NHLBI home page, select: News and Press Releases, then scroll down to
the January 3, 2001 news release.