Home >> Health News >> Mediterranean diet may thwart diabetes?

Mediterranean diet may thwart diabetes?

July 03, 2008

Study shows benefits of a diet that favors legumes, grains, fruits, nuts, vegetables, and fish. Eating a traditional Mediterranean diet may help prevent type 2 diabetes, a Spanish study shows.

The study included 13,380 Spanish university graduates (age range 20 to 90, average age 36) who were followed for about four years. They completed a dietary survey when the study started and follow-up questionnaires every two years after that.

The dietary survey included questions about foods, cooking methods, and olive oil consumption.



Based on the survey, participants were scored on a scale from 0 to 9 to show how closely they followed a Mediterranean diet. High scores meant they consumed a Mediterranean diet, meaning they favored legumes, grains, fruits, nuts, vegetables, fish, and moderate drinking and downplayed meat and dairy products.

A total of 33 people were diagnosed with type 2 diabetes during the follow-up period. Those who followed a Mediterranean diet were less likely to develop type 2 diabetes during the study.

For every two-point increase in the Mediterranean diet score, the odds of being diagnosed with type 2 diabetes dropped by 35%.

The study doesn't prove that the Mediterranean diet prevented type 2 diabetes. But the results held regardless of other factors such as physical activity and family history of diabetes.

The researchers - who included Miguel A. Martinez-Gonzalez, epidemiology professor - report their findings. Because few participants developed type 2 diabetes - and because the study only included college graduates in Spain - the researchers call for further studies to validate their findings.

Source: webmd.com



Related news
Latest News:
    Popular Medicines
Tramadol

Soma

Zyrtec

Kenalog

Viagra
    Advertisement
Online Discount Prescription
   
 
Home - News-letter - Terms of Service - Advertisement - Contact Us - Site map - Resource - Privacy - Send Feedback
 
Copyright © 2008 Medical Health Care Information All Rights Reserved.
Valid HTML 4.01 Transitional