Raw Food Vegans Thin but Healthy, Study Finds
Mon Mar 28, 2005 7:35 PM ET
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - People who
adhere strictly to raw food vegetarian diets are thin but have surprisingly
robust bones, U.S. researchers reported on
Monday.
Although nutritionists and the food industry have warned that a diet without
dairy foods can lead to the bone-thinning disease osteoporosis, the team at
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis found
the vegans they studied had many of the signs of strong bones.
"We think it's possible these people don't have increased risk of fracture but
that their low bone mass is related to the fact that they are lighter because
they take in fewer calories," Dr. Luigi Fontana, who led the study, said in a
statement.
"Raw food vegetarians believe in eating only plant-derived foods that have not
been cooked, processed, or otherwise altered from their natural state,"
Fontana's team wrote in this week's issue of the Archives of Internal medicine.
"Because of their low calorie and low protein intake, raw food vegetarians have
a low body mass index (BMI) and a low total body fat content. It is well
documented that a low BMI and weight loss are strongly associated with low bone
mass and increased fracture risk, while obesity protects against osteoporosis."
Fontana's team studied 18 strict raw food
vegans aged 33 to 85. All ate a diet that included unprepared foods such
vegetables, fruits, nuts, and sprouted grains. They had been on this diet for
an average of 3.6 years. The team compared
them to 18 more average Americans. The raw food group had an average body mass
index of 20.5, while the average group were slightly overweight with a BMI of
25.
BMI is an internationally accepted measurement of height to weight, and a BMI
of 18.5 to 24 is considered the healthy range.
Fontana expected the vegans to have low
vitamin D levels because they avoid all animal products including dairy. But in
fact their vitamin D levels were "markedly higher" than average.
Vitamin D is made by the skin when the body is exposed to
sunlight and is key to keeping strong bones. It is added to milk and other
foods because it is so important. "These people are clever enough to expose
themselves to sunlight to increase their concentrations of vitamin D," Fontana
said.
And the vegans had low levels of C-reactive protein, an inflammatory molecule
that is becoming linked with the risk of heart disease, diabetes and other
chronic disease. Furthermore, they
had lower levels of IGF-1, a growth factor linked to risk of breast and
prostate cancer.
Fontana does not advocate a raw food diet. But he said that to lower the risk
of cancer and heart disease people should eat more fruits, vegetables and whole
grains.
This is a subscription based e-mail.You may have requested to be informed
of events and activities of Living Light Culinary Arts Institute, and special
announcements that we sometimes pass on from our members. If you would like to
unsubscribe please reply to this message with unsubscribe in the subject line.
Blessings of Radiant Health!
Cherie
Living Light...
Creating a global community,
Built on love and acceptance,
With raw food and conscious living at its foundation.
www.RawFoodChef.com