Thursday, August 13, 2009

Chocolate Heart Health

Chocolate saves a heart from breaking and now every news report is saying the same thing without asking the same question on aspirin - "How much is enough?" The Stockholm/Boston report says that even a little is better than none but with our obese lifestyle any excuse is a good excuse to eat chocolate. Not any candy mind you, the review of the data says it must be chocolate. We're giving "kisses" as our wedding favors and its great to know we're being life savers even if we didn't consciously make the decision.
chocolate kisses
We can only access the free abstract which says: "Chocolate consumption was associated with lower cardiac mortality in a dose dependent manner in patients free of diabetes surviving their first AMI. Although our findings support increasing evidence that chocolate is a rich source of beneficial bioactive compounds, confirmation of this strong inverse relationship from other observational studies or large-scale, long-term, controlled randomized trials is needed."

From the very same Journal of Internal Medicine is a cautionary article publised earlier in the year: "The epidemic of obesity took off from about 1980 and in almost all countries has been rising inexorably ever since. Only in 1997 did WHO accept that this was a major public health problem and, even then, there was no accepted method for monitoring the problem in children."

While the reference is to Asia, Latin America and others to Swedish men obesity is a local problem with deadly consequences. Chocolate seems an easy solution to us the very lazy. Anything but diet and exercise and anytime the suggestion is adding chocolate to the mix whether it's coffee or candy - its the right perscription. A couple of kisses every other day sounds like just about the right amount IF we were to self medicate and we won't. We do have some extras though. There is a bag on the side of the bed so until their gone - what can it hurt?

While the review was of heart attack survivors the: "(o)bjectives. To assess the long-term effects of chocolate consumption amongst patients with established coronary heart disease. Design. In a population-based inception cohort study, we followed 1169 non-diabetic patients hospitalized with a confirmed first acute myocardial infarction (AMI) between 1992 and 1994 in Stockholm County, Sweden, as part of the Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program." The news is reporting this as newest, greatest, latest health information clearly it isn't but we suggest that everyone use caution when following any advice, including ours.

No comments:

Post a Comment