- Polymeal
The Polymeal is a diet-based approach to combatting heart disease, proposed in December
2004 by Oscar Franco, a Colombian public health scientist at the University Medical Centre inRotterdam ,The Netherlands . Franco and his colleagues suggest the "Polymeal" as a natural alternative to the "Polypill", a multi-drug-based strategy for reducing heart disease. The researchers used the same technique in the polypill paper: a statistical "meta-analysis " which combined the results of many previous studies. The paper, appearing in theBMJ 's traditionally light-hearted Christmas issue, may be regarded as somewhat satirical, as noted in responses in the journal.The study claims that adherence to the polymeal diet would delay the average onset of heart attack by nine years among men and by eight years among women. Because cardiovascular disease is the #1 cause of mortality in first-world nations, this delay of heart failure would increase the average lifespan of men by six years and women by 5.5 years.
The researchers combined several food items already known to reduce the risk of heart disease:
*Red wine , which contains theantioxidant resveratrol , and alcohol, which some researchers think may help to reduceatherosclerosis by reducingclot ting.
* Darkchocolate withoutdairy products
*Almond s
*Garlic
*Fish , particularlyoily fish , which are sources of theOmega-3 fatty acid s EPA and DHA.
*Fruit s andvegetable sThey suggest a person should consume, every day:
* 150 mL of red wine (about half a glass)
* 100 g of dark chocolate
* 400 g of fruits and vegetables
* 2.7 g of garlic
* 68 g of almondsas well as 118 g of fish per day four times each week.External links
* [http://www.americanheart.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=4422 Alcohol, Wine, and Cardiovascular Disease] From the American Heart Association
* [http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/002534.html Could Polymeal Increase Male Life Expectancy By 6 Years?] A discussion about the polymeal and the polypill at FuturePundit
* [http://www.factsmart.org/polymeal/poly.htm Isn't this really reduction ad absurdum?] Some pointers gleaned from the original articleAcademic references
* Franco OH, Bonneux L, de Laet C, Peeters A, Steyerberg EW, Mackenbach JP. "The Polymeal: a more natural, safer, and probably tastier (than the Polypill) strategy to reduce cardiovascular disease by more than 75%". BMJ 2004;329:1447-1450. [http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/reprint/329/7480/1447 Fulltext (PDF)] . PMID 15604180.
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