A University of Illinois study suggests avoiding cooking methods that produce the kind of crusty bits you'd find on a grilled hamburger, especially if you have diabetes and know you're at increased risk for cardiovascular disease because of your diagnosis.
"We see evidence that cooking methods that create a crust - think the edge of a brownie or the crispy borders of meats prepared at very high temperatures - produce advanced glycation end products (AGEs). And AGEs are associated with plaque formation, the kind we see in cardiovascular disease," said Karen Chapman-Novakofski, a U of I professor of nutrition.
For years nutrition experts have advised people with diabetes to bake, broil, or grill their food instead of frying it, she said.
"That's still true, but if you have diabetes, you should know that AGEs - byproducts of food preparation methods that feature very high, intense, dry heat - tend to end up on other tissues in the body, causing long-term damage," she added.
If you're fighting this vascular buildup anyway, Chapman-Novakofski thinks that consuming products containing AGEs could worsen the cardiovascular complications of diabetes.
In the U of I study, the scientists compared the 10-day food intake of 65 study participants in two ethnic groups: Mexicans (who have higher rates of diabetes and a greater risk of complications from the disease) and non-Hispanic whites.
"We found that people with higher rates of cardiovascular complications ate more of these glycated products. For each unit increase in AGEs intake, a study participant was 3.7 times more likely to have moderate to high risk for cardiovascular disease," said Claudia Luevano-Contreras, first author of the study.
The study showed that non-Hispanic whites had a higher intake of AGEs, and they consumed more saturated fats. However, the association between AGEs and cardiovascular disease was stronger than for saturated fats and heart disease, she said.
Eating less saturated fat and more fruits, vegetables, and fiber are important for people with diabetes, but this study shows that food preparation may be important too, she added.
"AGEs are higher in any kind of meat, but especially in ground meat," she said. "If you put hamburgers or brats on the grill, you'll likely have a higher AGEs content than if you chose a whole cut of meat, say round steak or chicken," said Chapman-Novakofski.
Boiling or stewing meat would reduce your AGEs intake further. And scrambling an egg with cooking spray instead of frying it leads to a significant reduction in AGEs, she added.
The scientists said more research is needed before definite recommendations can be made. They are planning another study in which they'll examine past AGEs intake of diabetes patients.
"These findings are preliminary, but they give us ample reason to further explore the association between AGEs and cardiovascular risk among people with diabetes," Chapman-Novakofski noted.
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Heart Problems Associated With Diabetes Likely Worsened By Crusty Foods
Diabetics May Benefit from n-3 Fatty Acids
Use of a margarine fortified with n-3 fatty acids significantly reduced post-myocardial infarction ventricular arrhythmia-related events among diabetic patients, according to a subset analysis of data from a null study.
Compared with placebo, patients who used the margarine experienced an 84% reduction in ventricular arrhythmia-related events, Daan Kromhout, MPH, PhD, from Wageningen University in Wageningen, the Netherlands, and colleagues found.
The supplementation with n-3 fatty acids also conferred a protective effect against cardiac arrest and sudden death, according to the study published in the December issue of Diabetes Care.
The benefit in the subset of patients with diabetes softens somewhat the disappointment with overall results from the ALPHA-OMEGA trial, which Kromhout reported in 2010 at the European Society of Cardiology meeting.
The study was designed as a secondary prevention trial that tested the hypothesis that n-3 fatty acid supplementation could reduce the risk of second heart attacks in elderly males.
When Kromhout reported the results at the ESC meeting he said that after 40 months, it "had no effect on the rate of major cardiovascular events," despite the fact that there appeared to be an early benefit with the intervention.
ALPHA-OMEGA enrolled 4,837 men, ages 60 to 80, who had survived MI. The secondary analysis was limited to a subset of 1,014 patients considered high risk due to diabetes.
Nearly three-quarters of the patients were diagnosed with diabetes from the combination of elevated blood glucose levels, physician-diagnosed self-report, and drug treatment. About 14% were diagnosed with diabetes on elevated glucose levels only, 9.9% on self-report only, and 3.4% on drug treatment only.
The margarine contained eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA). They randomized patients to four groups: placebo, ALA, EPA-DHA, and EPA-DHA plus ALA.
Baseline characteristics between these four groups did not differ significantly, including factors such as use of antithrombotic drugs, blood pressure medication, lipid-lowering drugs, and antidiabetic drugs.
Researchers recorded a mean intake of margarine of 18.6 g/day and had an 86% compliance rate to the full protocol.
The median follow-up was 40.7 months, equating to 3,195 person-years of follow-up. In that time, 29 patients developed a ventricular arrhythmia-related event, two died suddenly, one had a nonfatal cardiac arrest, 11 had a fatal cardiac arrest, and 15 had a cardioverter defibrillator implanted.
After Kromhout and colleagues adjusted for age, sex, and current smoking, they found that the consumption of n-3 fatty acids significantly reduced ventricular arrhythmia-related events: 0.9% versus 5.6% for placebo, P=0.03 (HR 0.16, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.69).
The fatty acids also helped reduce other cardiovascular events. The hazard ratio for the combined endpoint of cardiac arrest and sudden death was 0.13 (95% CI 0.02 to 1.09) and for placement of a cardioverter defibrillator, it was 0.19 (95% CI 0.02 to 1.55).
The n-3 fatty acid supplementation did not make a significant difference for fatal MI, but in the adjusted model, the combination of all three fatty acids was the closest to reaching significance for this endpoint with a hazard ratio of 0.53.
The analysis was limited by its secondary design, as well as by the small number of ventricular arrhythmia events and deaths from MI, researchers said.
"These mechanistic findings support an important role for n-3 fatty acids in the etiology of diabetes, a major risk factor of fatal MI," they concluded.