Eating
certain whole fruits may reduce the risk for type 2 diabetes, according to the
results of 3 combined prospective longitudinal cohort studies, by Isao Muraki, PhD,
MD, from the Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston , Massachusetts
and published in online August 29 in BMJ.
However,
juice consumption may up the risk for diabetes. To get a better assessment of
the role fruit might have in diabetes risk, the investigators combined data
from 3 studies: the Nurses' Health Study (n = 66,105), Nurses' Health Study II
(n = 85,104), and Health Professionals Follow-up Study (n = 36,173).
Over
the course of 3,464,641 person-years of follow-up, 12,198 participants
developed type 2 diabetes. In a multivariate analysis adjusted for personal,
lifestyle, and dietary risk factors for diabetes, every 3 servings of fruit per
week were associated with a lower risk for type 2 diabetes.
When
the researchers looked at individual types of fruit in a multivariate analysis,
adjusted for the same factors, they found that 3 servings per week of some
fruits were more closely associated with reduced risk than others: blueberries,
grapes and raisins, apples and pears, bananas and grapefruit. Conversely, the
intake of cantaloupe or fruit juice was associated with an increase in the risk
for type 2 diabetes.
In
a secondary analysis, the investigators found that the consumption of high
glycemic load fruits was linked to a lower risk for type 2 diabetes, as was
consumption of moderate glycemic index fruits.
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