Pecans raise Vitamin
E levels and may support prostate and intestinal health. Further
analysis of the participants in the above study revealed that
a pecan-enriched diet significantly raised blood levels of gamma
tocopherol compared to the Step I diet. This is due to the high
amounts of naturally occurring gamma tocopherol (a unique form
of vitamin E) in the pecans. Gamma tocopherol is an important
antioxidant nutrient and studies have shown that it may benefit
intestinal health and have a protective effect against prostate
cancer. This research was presented at the April 2001 Experimental
Biology meeting and published in the FASEB Journal.
Pecans increase fiber and nutrient
intake. Researchers at Texas
A&M University
found that a heart-healthy diet containing pecans can help control
specific biomarkers of heart disease risk as
effectively as the AHA Step I diet. They
also found that the pecan-rich diet significantly increased
participants'; levels of dietary fiber, thiamin, magnesium,
copper and manganese
and actually changed copper and magnesium intakes from inadequate
(on
the AHA diet) to adequate (on the pecan diet). All of the participants
had already been eating a relatively low-fat diet.
For this study, they were placed on either the Step I diet
or a higher-fat pecan-based diet. This information was presented
at a May 2001 American Heart Association Conference on Arteriosclerosis,
Thrombosis and Vascular Biology.
Pecans: a concentrated source of
natural plant sterols. Researchers at the University
of Georgia have determined that plant sterols are found naturally
in pecans in concentrated amounts. 90 percent of those pecan
sterols are in the form of beta-sitosterol, which has been cited
as a food component that competes with the absorption of cholesterol
in the body and thus has the ability to lower blood cholesterol
levels.
Adding
pecans to your diet can lower "bad" cholesterol. A
study at New Mexico State University (NMSU) has found that pecans
offer something even more important than great taste and versatility
- a positive impact on health. The research, conducted by NMSU's
Wanda Morgan, Ph.D., shows that adding pecans to a self-selected
diet lowers LDL or "bad" cholesterol levels by six
percent; total cholesterol levels were lower as well. This encouraging
news about the positive impact of pecans on heart health was
published in the March 2000 issue of Journal of the American
Dietetic Association. In this study, nineteen men and women with
normal blood lipid levels were divided into two groups, one of
which served as the "control" group, and ate its regular
diet for eight weeks. Subjects in the "test" (pecan-eaters)
group, however,
supplemented their diets with three-fourths of a cup of pecans
every day. Even though the test group ate more total fat, monounsaturated
fat and polyunsaturated fat each day than those who did not eat
pecans, test subjects lowered their levels of bad and total cholesterol
- and did not gain weight. "The research shows that we don't
have to be afraid of the fat in pecans," says Dr. Morgan. "Pecans
can be a part of a balanced and varied diet." |