By Michelle Roberts
If everyone over the age of 50 ate an apple a day, 8,500 deaths from
heart attacks and strokes could be avoided every year in the UK, say researchers.
Apples would give a similar boost to cardiovascular health as
medicines, such as statins, yet carry none of the side-effects, the University
of Oxford researchers say in the BMJ.
They base their assumptions on modelling, not direct scientific study.
Any fruit should work, but getting people to comply could be
challenging.
More than two-thirds of adults do not eat the recommended five
portions of fruit and veg a day, population surveys suggest.
And although nine in 10 of us do manage to eat at least one portion
a day, Dr Adam Briggs and colleagues, from the British Heart Foundation Health
Promotion Research Group at Oxford University, say we would all benefit from
eating more.
By their calculations, if adults of all ages could manage to eat an extra
portion of fruit or veg a day, as many as 11,000 vascular deaths could be
averted each year.
Nutritional
composition of an apple
Picture by Dolores Neilson
Energy: 35.4kcal
Fat: 0.09g
Saturated fat: 0.02g
Monosaturates: 0.01g
Polyunsaturates: 0.05g
Cholesterol: 0.00mg
Fibre: 1.39g
Salt: 0.00g
The Victorian mantra of "an apple a day" to keep the
doctor away is particularly important for the over-50s, who are at increased
risk of vascular diseases, say the researchers.
They analysed the effect on the most common causes of vascular
mortality - heart attacks and strokes - of prescribing either a statin a day,
which lowers cholesterol, or an apple a day to people over 50.
Assuming at least seven in every 10 complied with the advice, statin
drugs could save 9,400 lives and an apple a day 8,500 lives a year, they
calculate.
The data their work rests on comprises a large body of medical
trials and observations involving hundreds of thousands of patients.
Dr Briggs said: "The Victorians had it about right when they
came up with their brilliantly clear and simple public health advice, 'An apple
a day keeps the doctor away'
"It just shows how effective small changes in diet can be, and
that both drugs and healthier living can make a real difference in preventing
heart disease and stroke.
"While no-one currently prescribed statins should replace them
for apples, we could all benefit from simply eating more fruit."
Dr Peter Coleman, of the Stroke Association, said everyone stood to
benefit from eating a balanced diet.
"Apples have long been known as a natural source of
antioxidants and chemical compounds called flavanoids, all of which are good for
our health and well-being.
"This study shows that, as part of a healthy diet with plenty
of fresh fruit and veg, a daily apple could help to reduce the risk of stroke
and heart disease. "
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