4 Reasons to Grab a Handful of Almonds as Your Next Snack

Main Category: Nutrition / Diet
Article Date: 07 Feb 2005 - 15:00 PDT

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'4 Reasons to Grab a Handful of Almonds as Your Next Snack'

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4.36 (33 votes)

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3.33 (3 votes)

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During American Heart Month, a new study adds to the body of research on almonds' healthy heart and weight benefits.

Crunchy, handy almonds have been sighted in many new breakfast, snack, and salad products as research continues to show their healthful qualities. So, when you're perusing the supermarket aisles during American Heart Month (February) or National Nutrition Month (March), consider these three reasons almonds fit the bill as a perfect nutritional "boost" to meals and snacks:

1) New research supports almonds' ability to lower cholesterol. A study to be published Monday in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition provides more evidence that almonds are one of the most heart-healthy foods around.

The study finds that when directly compared to first-generation statins, a certain heart-healthy dietary approach including almonds is just as effective in lowering LDL, or "bad," cholesterol below the recommended range for heart disease prevention.

The approach, known as the "Portfolio" eating plan because it includes a variety of heart-healthy foods, included foods such as oatmeal, beans, olive oil, soy products, and a daily one-ounce handful of almonds. Researchers called almonds a "mini-Portfolio" because in and of themselves, they contain several components emphasized in the eating plan -- vegetable protein, fiber, plant sterols and other several heart-healthy nutrients.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than half of all American adults have cholesterol levels higher than they should be.

2) Almonds are nutritionally dense -- a quality emphasized in the government's latest Dietary Guidelines. Almonds are the most nutritionally dense nut, whether compared calorie per calorie or ounce per ounce. The recently released Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005 encourage Americans to choose nutritionally dense foods -- that is, to get the most nutrition possible out of the calories you eat. A one-ounce, 164-calorie serving of almonds, or about a handful, is an excellent source of vitamin E and magnesium, and a good source of fiber. It also offers heart-healthy monounsaturated fat, protein, potassium, calcium, phosphorous and iron.

In fact, according to a study in the British Journal of Nutrition last fall, individuals who added almonds as a snack to their regular diet increased their overall intake of several important nutrients. The study's researchers, from Loma Linda University in California, concluded that incorporating almonds into a diet may promote the natural displacement of less nutrient-dense foods, making the overall nutritional quality of the diet better.

3) Eating almonds may help maintain or even lose weight. A recent study in the International Journal of Obesity found that adding a daily ration of almonds to a low-calorie diet enhanced weight loss, as well as significantly improved risk factors associated with heart disease, when compared to a low-fat, low-calorie diet. Researchers cited almonds' heart-healthy monounsaturated fat as being very satiating, helping satisfy the appetite and prevent patients from overeating.

4) Almonds are tasty, satisfying and versatile. Whether added to low-fat yogurt, included in a healthy trail mix, or munched on their own, almonds have a toasty crunch that's perfect for any time of day, and for many other foods.

For more information

The Almond Board of California has responded to the new Portfolio Eating Plan study's positive results involving almonds by creating a patient and health professional website with more information on the Portfolio eating plan, including study abstracts, menus used by the research team, meal ideas and recipes. Visit http://www.PortfolioEatingPlan.com. For other information on almonds, visit http://www.AlmondsAreIn.com.

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our nutrition / diet section for the latest news on this subject.
Jaceldo-Siegl K, Sabate J, Rajaram S, Fraser GE. "Long-Term Almond Supplementation Without Advice on Food Replacement Induces Favorable Nutrient Modifications to the Habitual Diets of Free-Living Individuals." British Journal of Nutrition, 92, (3), pp. 533-540. Research Organization: Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, Calif.

Wien M, Sabate JM, Ikle DN, Cole SE, Kandeel FR. "Almonds vs. Complex Carbohydrates in a Weight Reduction Program." International Journal of Obesity, 2003, vol. 27, pp. 1365-1372. Research Organization: City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, Calif.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

Money Talks but Health is Wealth

posted by Hazel Thornhill on 20 Mar 2006 at 6:27 am

It is great to see that the University of Toronto played a key role in the study of how eating almonds, soy protein and vegetables could lower one's cholesterol as effectively as statin drugs.

If only we can get more doctors to encourage overweight individuals to look seriously at diet and exercise as a way to better health and not look to "the pill fix", we would be well on the way to "an once of prevention being better than a pound of cure".

I have long advocated to my friends and family that we are what we eat. The things we do to our bodies we would not do to our cars.

For example, would we run our car without a tune-up at certain mileage intervals? The body's tune-up is cleansing at certain intervals - at the change of each season. Would we run our car without oil changes? The oil change for our body is daily physical activity to keep our motor (heart) working in peak condition and keep oxygenating our blood so it can flow easily.

I have recently used a diet (my accumulated knowledge and imaginative cooking) very similar in composition to the Portfolio Diet and 40-mins. of exercise 4-times a week to drop several pounds. I had not been following my own advice - I had been working 16-hour days and neglecting "me" to my own detriment. I was lucky that I heard the warning signs as someone who listens closely to what my body tells me.

Thanks to the Almond Board, the University of Toronto Research team, Loblaws Brand and all who made this study possible for bringing it to the attention of us the public.

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