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19 Jul 2018
1 min read
Nutri-dense food

Plain yogurt has a low energy density

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Yogurt is a nutrient dense food and plain yogurt has a low energy density

Energy density is the amount of energy – or calories – per gram of food. Lower energy density foods provide fewer calories per gram than higher energy density foods. Hence low energy dense foods allow satisfying portions with a relatively low calorie content to be eaten.

Compared with other foods, plain low-fat yogurt has a low energy density of 0.6–1.5 kcal/g.

Energy density of selected foods

References:
16 Jul 2018
4 min read
by YINI Editorial team
Nutri-dense food

Stave off your hunger with a healthy snack of yogurt and chia

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It’s mid-morning and you’re feeling peckish. You’d like a little something to tide you over until lunchtime, but you want to resist breaking open the biscuits for a short-lasting sugar surge. What to do?

The answer starts in your fridge. Take out the yogurt and throw in a spoonful of chia seeds. Not only will this healthy snack help manage your mid-morning munchies, but by taking the edge off your hunger, it may also mean you eat fewer calories at your next meal.

Even better, this satisfying snack is likely to reduce your craving for something sugary, a study from Turkey has found.

Dietary strategies to overcome obesity

As the pressure is on to find solutions to the alarming rise in obesity and its associated diseases, scientists are seeking ways to help people cap their energy intake, for example, by choosing foods that make them feel full.

It seems that certain foods with high fibre content can increase this feeling of satiety and reduce hunger between meals, thereby helping to reduce calorie intakes. One food that holds particular promise is chia.

Chia seeds (the scientific name for which is Salvia hispanica L.) were historically an important part of the diet for people in Mexico and central America. Chia seeds are a treasure-trove of nutritional goodies – proteins, minerals and vitamins – and chia oil is the most abundant plant source of omega-3 fatty acids. Perhaps even more important is the high fibre content of chia, making up over 30% of the total weight.

So it’s not surprising that studies have found chia to have beneficial effects in several health conditions, including heart disease, diabetes, hypertension.

Could yogurt with chia be the perfect combination for a healthy snack?

Its nutritional portfolio makes chia an obvious candidate to complement yogurt in a healthy, satiating snack. To put this to the test, the authors of this study assessed the short-term effects on appetite of a snack comprising chia seeds added to plain yogurt.

Their study involved 24 healthy women aged 19-25 years who were randomly allocated on the day of the test to eat a mid-morning snack of yogurt alone, yogurt with 7g of chia seeds, or yogurt with 14g of chia seeds – all closely matched for energy content. They then swapped so that by the end of the study everyone had tried each of the three possible snacks, with a week’s gap between each of the three test days.

Two hours after each snack, lunch was served. Throughout the test day, the participants were asked to rate various satiety and appetite measures, using a visual scale.

Chia with yogurt increased satiety

Results revealed that snacking on chia seed with plain yogurt increased the feeling of satiety and reduced the feeling of hunger. On the days the participants ate chia seeds, they also reported significantly lower scores in the amount of food they felt they could eat, and a lower desire for sugary foods.

The results showed that when the participants ate yogurt with chia seeds as a mid-morning snack, their energy intake when it came to lunchtime fell by about one-quarter compared with a snack of yogurt alone.

‘These results suggest that chia seed consumption can be a useful dietary strategy in the prevention of overweight and obesity status in healthy individuals.’ – Ayaz A et al, 2018.

The amount of chia seeds eaten didn’t seem to make much difference – both the 7g and the 14g amounts with yogurt had similar effects on satiety and on lunchtime energy intakes. This suggests you can achieve your energy intake reduction by adding just 7g of chia seeds to your yogurt – although further research is needed to confirm this, say the authors.

The authors also point out that, while this study assessed the short-term effects of yogurt with chia seed snacks, the effects of long term consumption of such snacks on overweight or obesity-related measurements remains to be seen.

‘Based on this result, it can be suggested that the threshold for energy intake reduction by chia seed is 7g, although further studies are needed to clarify this outcome.’ – Ayaz A et al, 2018.

Find out more: read the original article.

Source: Ayaz A, Akyol A, Inan-Eroglu E et al. Chia seed (Salvia Hispanica L.) added yogurt reduces short-term food intake and increases satiety: randomised controlled trial. Nutr Res Pract. 2017 Oct;11(5):412-418.

12 Jul 2018
3 min read
Nutri-dense food

Yogurt consumption helps meet nutrient intake requirements

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“Yogurt is a nutrient-rich food” is one is one of the 10 evidence-based conclusions made by the YINI board about the health effects of yogurt… learn more below

Yogurt consumption helps meet nutrient intake requirements in adults and children

Yogurt and other dairy products contribute to key nutrient intakes for adults and children. That is why most countries recommend the consumption of dairy products – and, when amounts are specified, two or three servings per day are typically recommended.
For example, a 125-g pot of plain yogurt provides, among other nutrients, 20% of an adult’s recommended daily intake (RDI) of calcium, 21% of vitamin B2, 11% of vitamin B12, and 16% of phosphorus.

Nutrient content of yogurt

Good diet quality is especially important for children and adolescents to support growth and development.

Yogurt is a valuable part of a balanced nutrient-rich diet during this period, contributing a substantial percentage of a child’s needs for micronutrients and macronutrients.

In fact, many people do not eat the recommended intakes of certain nutrients, which are therefore referred to as the ‘shortfall nutrients’. Teenagers are especially at risk of nutrient shortfall, and vitamin D, calcium, potassium, fibre and iron are of particular concern.

Data from the National Health Nutrition and Examination Survey (NHANES) show that increasing dairy food consumption (milk, cheese and yogurt) to meet the recommended level in the USA for adolescents of three servings per day can make up for the shortfall of three nutrients of public health concern – calcium, vitamin D and potassium.

The UK survey data suggest that adding a 125 g pot of low-fat fruit yogurt per day to adolescents’ diets would increase mean calcium intake from below to above the Recommended Nutrient Intake.

“Nutrient density is a key feature of food that we should prefer in the context of a balanced diet, and yogurt is a nutrient-dense food containing a wide range of macro- and micro-nutrients.” – Professor Michele Sculati

References:

  • Keast DR et al. Associations between yogurt, dairy, calcium, and vitamin D intake andobesity among U.S. children aged 8–18 years: NHANES, 2005–2008. Nutrients 2015;7:1577–93.
  • Marette A, Picard-Deland E. Yogurt consumption and impact on health: focus on children and cardiometabolic risk. Am J Clin Nutr 2014;99:1243S–7S.
  • Demmer E et al. The impact of doubling dairy or plant-based foods on consumption of nutrients of concern and proper bone health for adolescent females. Public Health Nutr 2017;20:824–31.
  • Weaver CM. How sound is the science behind the dietary recommendations for dairy? Am J Clin Nutr 2014; 99(5 Suppl):1217S–22S.
  • Table Ciqual des aliments 2008, ANSES ; Directive européenne (90/496/CEE).
  • Martin A et al. Apports nutritionnels conseillés pour la population française, 3rd edition, Ed TEC&DOC 2007 pp 605.
09 Jul 2018
4 min read
by YINI Editorial team
Fermentation benefits Gut Health Lactose intolerance

Probiotics show promise in tackling lactose intolerance

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If you suffer from lactose intolerance, you’ll know only too well how disruptive the symptoms can be to everyday life. Bloating, abdominal cramps, nausea, and/or diarrhoea can be enough to put you off milk products altogether. But now there’s a light at the end of the tunnel. A growing body of evidence is emerging to suggest that probiotics, some of which are commonly found in milk products such as yogurt, may alleviate the troublesome symptoms of lactose intolerance.

Lactose intolerance arises when we don’t have sufficient levels of the enzyme needed to digest lactose, the sugar naturally present in dairy products. Undigested lactose passes into the colon where bacteria break it down into short-chain fatty acids and gas – and that’s when we become painfully aware of the problem.

Lactose intolerance is common whatever your ethnic origins but Asian and African people seem particularly prone to it: 50-90% of these populations suffer from lactose intolerance compared with 5-15% of Europeans and North Americans.

Probiotics – friendly life forms

In efforts to ease this heavy burden of lactose intolerance, researchers have focused their attention in recent years on probiotics – the bacteria and yeasts that can be used to supplement the trillions of tiny life forms that inhabit our intestine: the gut microbiota.

Probiotics are live micro-organisms that, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host. Not only can they help our gut health, but they’ve also been associated with several other benefits, including boosting our immune system and reducing cholesterol in our blood.

How can probiotics help in lactose intolerance?

Probiotics also give our gut a helping hand in digesting lactose, and so they’re the obvious choice when it comes to searching for solutions to lactose intolerance. Probiotics can reduce the concentration of lactose in fermented products such as yogurt, and increase the activity of the enzyme which breaks down lactose, that enters the small intestine with the fermented products.

The authors of this article reviewed 15 key studies looking at the role of probiotics in alleviating symptoms of lactose intolerance. They assessed eight strains of probiotic bacteria – mostly from the Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus types – with the most proven benefits.

Their review revealed that the effects of these probiotic strains varied widely across the studies but overall, a positive relationship was seen between probiotics and lactose intolerance.

‘Results showed varying degrees of efficacy but an overall positive relationship between probiotics and lactose intolerance.’ – Oak SJ et al, 2018.

Of the eight strains assessed in this review, Bifidobacterium animalis was among the most researched and most effective against lactose intolerance. Five out of the six studies analysed showed B. animalis to have potential in treating lactose intolerance symptoms.

Probiotics in yogurt play several important roles

Two bacteria found in yogurt are the lactic acid bacteria Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus. They play several important roles in our digestive tract. For example, L. bulgaricus increases the acidity inside the gut and this helps protect against pathogens. By breaking down lactose, S. thermophilus has been shown to make it easier for people with lactose intolerance to digest dairy products.

Of the studies in this review, one found that consumption of fresh yogurt containing live L. bulgaricus and S thermophilus was associated with benefits in people with poor lactose absorption compared with yogurt that had been heat-treated to kill the bacteria. Four further studies also showed that L. bulgaricus could reduce the symptoms of lactose intolerance. Similarly, there were some positive results for S. thermophilus, but some other studies did not find benefits of supplementation with these two bacteria.

Analysing these results, the authors point out that it’s essential to understand the importance of variations in concentrations and preparations of probiotics used, and to have consistent ways of measuring their effects.

They conclude that further clinical studies are needed to assess the roles of specific probiotic strains and concentrations, and to discover the mechanisms through which they may exert their effects.

‘In order to elucidate the potential therapeutic relationship between probiotics and [lactose intolerance], new strategies concerning specific strains, concentrations, and preparations of probiotics must be developed.’ – Oak SJ et al, 2018.

Find out more: read the original article.

Source: Oak SJ, Jha R. The effects of probiotics in lactose intolerance: A systematic review. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 2018 Feb 9:1-9.

05 Jul 2018
1 min read
Monthly newsletter

6th YINI Summit: special report

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05 Jul 2018
4 min read
ASN Nutrition 2018 Cardiovascular health

Dairy foods, diabetes & metabolic health

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If you missed the insightful YINI Summit at ASN 2018 Boston, you can catch up on Dariush Mozaffarian’s expert presentation here, where he challenges current dietary guidelines and shares evidence on the protective effect of full-fat dairy foods (and if you want more highlights, check out the wrap up post).

We are undergoing a global nutrition crisis, begins Mozaffarian: contributing factors include sustainability and climate change, national security, government budgets, healthcare costs and health and well-being. Diet is a modifiable risk factor for cardio-metabolic diseases such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer and Type 2 diabetes (T2D).

There is a plethora of dietary information available at our fingertips; scientific journals are accompanied by apps, diet books and marketing strategies by commercial companies, much of which can lead to confusion amongst the public.

Conventional wisdom supports the “calories in /calories out” theory

diet & obesity/diabetes: conventional wisdom by d mozaffarian

A survey of the dietary recommendations across the globe shows an overwhelming agreement in advice to choose low-fat dairy foods, to reduce fat and especially saturated fat intake. Calories and fat dominate current policy. We’ve been focussing on single nutrients since 1753, when James Lind tested whether citrus fruits prevent scurvy, and in 1932 the revolutionary link was made between vitamin C and scurvy. In a nutshell,one nutrient having an effect on one disease.

Over the years, dietary guidelines have focussed on the amount of nutrients needed to prevent deficiency diseases, and modern recommendations use isolated nutrient targets which are translated into food recommendations.

The Weighty Problem…

The average adult gains is about 1lb/0.45kg each year. This isn’t just about calories in / calories out, as there is growing evidence to support the fact that all calories are not created equal. Many factors contribute to this – and the gut microbiome has a significant role to play.

The quality of your diet affects your gut microbiome and Mozaffarian quoted randomised trials that show reductions in weight and BMI with consumption of probiotics. As well as weight loss, dairy foods have been shown to reduce risks of CVD and T2D.

…and the importance of considering food type

Interestingly, the relationship of dairy to CVD and T2D does not consistently differ by fat content, but appears to be more specific to food type, as in cheese, yogurt, milk or butter.

These findings suggest that health effects of dairy may depend on multiple complex characteristics, such as probiotics in yogurt, and fermentation of cheese.

dairy & cardiometabolic health: potential mechanisms by D Mozaffarian

Focus on the Food instead of single nutrients

Mozaffarian argues that dietary guidelines tend to focus on nutrients, which can be misleading; typically, low-fat, fat-free and low-saturated fat foods are considered to be healthier. He conveyed that nutrition is influenced by far more than individual choice, yet policy makers continue to advise the consumer to choose low-calorie, low-saturated fat, and low-sugar foods.

The evidence does not support these recommendations, particularly when it comes to full-fat dairy foods: in short-term randomized trials, dairy foods added to energy-restricted diets increase lean mass and reduce body fat, while no significant body compositional effects are seen when adding dairy to ad libitum diets.  This may partly relate to caloric compensation: when people consume more low-fat dairy, they compensate in the long-term by increasing their consumption of carbohydrates.

Further, greater dairy fat intake is associated with a lower risk of T2D and coronary heart diseases (CHD). It is yet unclear whether such findings relate to health benefits of specific dairy fatty acids, or other factors in high-fat dairy foods. What we do know is that dairy products represent a diverse class of foods, each having their own effect on health, and the complex mechanistic pathways that offer benefit may include influences of fermentation and probiotics.

Time to Revisit Dietary Recommendations?

The evidence on beneficial effects of full-fat dairy does not support the guidelines that emphasize low-fat dairy, and Mozaffarian goes as far as to say that the guidelines are based on “theorized influences on obesity and CHD, rather than empirical evidence”. Dairy foods should not be considered as a single category, and should be evaluated on their own merit

Pending further investigation, the current science supports we eat more yogurt; whether we choose low-fat or full-fat should be down to personal preference.

Written by Azmina Govindji (@azminanutrition)

05 Jul 2018
2 min read
Nutri-dense food

Yogurt is a nutrient-rich food and contains micronutrients and macronutrients

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“Yogurt is a nutrient-rich food” is one is one of the 10 evidence-based conclusions made by the YINI board about the health effects of yogurt… learn more below

Yogurt in a nutrient-rich food and contains both micronutrients – vitamins and minerals – and macronutrients, including proteins and fatty acids.

Yogurt contains high-quality protein, including all nine essential amino acids in the proportions needed for protein synthesis.

Proteins in yogurt are more digestible than proteins in standard milk, probably because the fermentation process starts to break them down into smaller units.

Yogurt is a well-recognised source of calcium, but it also provides smaller amounts of many other micronutrients, including potassium, zinc, phosphorus, magnesium, vitamin A, riboflavin, vitamin B5, vitamin B12 and in some countries, vitamin D.

References:
 
02 Jul 2018
4 min read
ASN Nutrition 2018 Fermentation benefits

A yogurt a day, keeps the doctor away!

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Consider this: Right now you are walking around with roughly 100 trillion live and diverse gut bacteria which equates to 3-5 lbs of these little critters and 1,000 different strains that are vying for dominance.  If the healthy bacteria win, you are in luck.  Our gut and the balance of the bacteria within the gut, are responsible for our optimal health, mental health and our weight.

Just recently, the American Society of Nutrition hosted the prestigious Nutrition 2018 Conference in Boston on June 10th. This year’s edition of Yogurt In Nutrition’s symposium is entitled: “Yogurt, more than the sum of its parts” and focused on the notion of the food matrix. Below is a summary of the esteemed Professor Bob Hutkins research presentation: “The role of live bacteria in the health potential of yogurt”

What does the science show?

Science shows that gut bacteria do, in fact, influence our intestinal and extra-intestinal health.  Research has revealed that obese people, for example, have a less diverse balance of microbes that lean folks, which drives weight gain, inflammation and the consequences of both. Probiotics strengthen the integrity of the lining of the gut, preventing inflammatory molecules from entering the bloodstream, preventing the ‘chain reaction’ that leads to glucose intolerance, type-2 diabetes, inflammation and obesity. Therefore, our weight is directly impacted by the balance of our healthy microflora.

Our gut houses 70% of our immune system. our mental health is affected as well with 90% of the feel-good neurotransmitter, serotonin, being made, not in the brain, but in the gut itself. We have 500 million brain cells in the lining of our gut, and that’s why our gut is considered our ‘second brain.’

You may now get sense of how crucial it is to ensure we create and maintain a healthy microbiome.

Yogurt’s role in our overall health

For fermented foods such as yogurt, the products of fermentation and the bacteria involved in the fermentation process, can provide additional properties to the food beyond basic nutrition.

Yogurt is a key player as a healthy fermented food addition to our diet. There are fundamental and unique reasons why .

  1. In general, yogurt bacteria do not reach the GI tract. However, there is increasing evidence that bacteria contained in fermented products survive transit and are biologically active in the colon. Such activities might be part of the mechanisms underlying beneficial health effect
  2. Regular yogurt consumption was associated with a slight increase in microbial diversity and may alter the function of the existing resident bacteria
  3. Studies suggest that fermented foods, including yogurt, may confer several health benefits:
  • respiratory and gastrointestinal infections
  • bone health
  • blood pressure
  • immune & anti-inflammatory responses
  • lactose digestion in individuals with lactose malabsorption

specific living cultures present in yogurt explain its effect on lactose digestion

Hutkins highlights that yogurt is different from probiotic yogurt:

  • yogurt bacteria are Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus
  • Probiotic bacteria commonly added to yogurt are Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus spp.

Once the healthy gut bacteria from the yogurt do make it to the GI tract, beneficial changes begin to occur such as: increased immune function, lowered Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), enhanced gut barrier, improved digestion, improved bowel changes, lower LDL cholesterol, and increased mineral absorption, Research also shows that yogurt consumption is associated with less weight gain in all cohorts.

regular yogurt consumption is associated with less weight gain over time

Ultimately, a healthy gut promotes healthy cellular changes that encourages longevity, reduced blood pressure, mental well-being and increased bone health.

Diets that are rich in fermented foods, including yogurt, are associated with health and longevity. Consistent daily use of yogurt will aggregate and maintain the bifidobacterial and lactobacilli species of bacteria in the intestinal tract,

Hutkins concludes his presentation with 4 fundamental questions and answers:

  • Do fermentation-derived microbes survive transit and reach the gut? YES
  • Do fermentation-derived microbes influence the gut microbiota? POSSIBLY
  • Do fermentation-derived microbes have biological or functional activity in the gut? POSSIBLY
  • Do fermentation-derived microbes contribute to health? YES FOR YOGURT? MAYBE OTHERS

Thus, according to Hutkins, “Fermented foods, including those that contain live microorganisms, should be included as part of a healthy diet”.

Synthesis written by Dr Lori Shemek (@LoriShemek)

02 Jul 2018
4 min read
by YINI Editorial team
Diabetes prevention Weight management

It’s a weighty problem that yogurt might help solve

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If you come from a family with a track record of obesity, the chance are you’ll be fighting the flab yourself. And you’ll be only too well aware of the risks that come hand in hand with being overweight or obese. Type 2 diabetes, poor overall health, and even an early death don’t make a great prospect for the future.

But now research has shown that eating yogurt may protect against one of the major risks to health associated with obesity – insulin resistance. This effect appears to be specific to youth whose family history puts them at risk of obesity, say the authors of this study of young Canadians.

Children born into families with a weight problem are challenged right from the word go. A young person whose mum or dad is obese is four times more likely to be overweight or obese in adulthood than a youth coming from a slim family. And if both parents are obese, the risk of becoming overweight as an adult soars to a whopping ten times that of someone whose parents are of healthy weight.

So why do children of oversized parents tend to pile on the pounds themselves? It could be due to genetics, but scientists think environmental factors may also play a role – for instance, how well-off a family is and the kind of foods they eat.

Why investigate yogurt in obesity risk?

The authors chose to investigate yogurt consumption because young people, especially teenagers, are consuming fewer dairy foods than in the past and researchers have wondered whether this is somehow contributing to the obesity epidemic. Studies have shown children who have the highest intakes of dairy are less likely to be overweight/obese than those with the lowest intake.

Family history was linked to body weight and metabolic profile

This study involved young people with a mean age of 20 years who were taking part in the long-term Quebec Family Study. Data from 112 youths who had at least one obese parent were compared with those from 86 who had no family history of obesity.

The results showed that the young people who had a family history of obesity were more likely to weigh more, have a higher body mass index and more body fat than those with no obese parents. They also tended to have a poorer metabolic profile, as shown by their insulin levels and insulin resistance, than those with no obese family history.

Those who ate yogurt had better insulin profiles

Eating yogurt wasn’t associated with weight or body fat in these young people with a family history of obesity. But those among them who ate yogurt did have healthier levels of insulin resistance than those who didn’t eat yogurt.

In fact, those with a family history of obesity who ate yogurt had insulin profiles that were similar to those of youths who had no family history of obesity.

Among those whose parents were both of healthy weight, yogurt consumption made no difference to their weight or to their insulin profiles.

How yogurt might achieve this effect

The results suggest yogurt consumption may protect against insulin resistance specifically in young people whose family history makes them susceptible to obesity, the authors conclude.

The link between yogurt consumption and insulin profiles may be to do with the proteins contained in yogurt, and its bioactive peptides that are produced during fermentation of dairy products such as yogurt.

Why this beneficial effect is only seen in those with a family history of obesity is unclear, say the authors. Perhaps it’s because the genetic susceptibility to obesity is partly mediated by changes in gut microbiota and this might be modified by yogurt consumption.

‘Consuming yogurt may protect against insulin resistance more specifically among youth at risk of obesity, and this relationship appears to be independent of body composition and lifestyle factors measured in this study.– Panahi S et al, 2018

Find out more: read the original article.

Source: Panahi S, Gallant A, Tremblay A et al. The relationship between yogurt consumption, body weight, and metabolic profiles in youth with a familial predisposition to obesity. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2018 Apr 25.

25 Jun 2018
4 min read
by YINI Editorial team
Other studies

Set your sights on a regular yogurt consumption… to keep cataracts at bay?

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We’ve all heard yogurt can be good for us, but who’d have thought that it might even help preserve our sight? This eye-opening revelation comes from the first study to look at the association between dairy products in the diet and the risk of developing a cataract, one of the world’s leading causes of visual impairment and blindness.

The protective effect seems to be unique to skimmed yogurt – it wasn’t seen with milk or any of the other dairy products investigated in this study.

The importance of this discovery is brought into sharp focus when we consider how common and debilitating cataracts are. By the time we reach 70 years old, at least four out of ten of us will have developed a cataract, clouding our vision and hindering our everyday activities.

Once a cataract has formed, the only way of treating it is with an operation to replace the cataract lens in the eye, but the surgery isn’t without risks. As is so often the case, it’s better to prevent cataracts in the first place, by tackling their underlying cause.

In fact, we don’t yet know exactly what does cause cataracts but there is some evidence that lays the blame on inflammation and oxidation – which leads to cell damage as we age. Both these processes can be affected by what we eat, and researchers have shown that certain nutrients, such as vitamin A, are associated with reduced risk of cataract.

Nutrients in yogurt may modify our risk of cataract

Yogurt and other dairy products are packed full of healthy nutrients, including calcium, magnesium, potassium, and vitamins A and B12. A high intake of yogurt has previously been shown to be protective against type 2 diabetes, which is associated with inflammation.

So it stands to reason that including dairy products in our regular diet might help keep our eyes in tip-top condition. The authors put this theory to the test, using a branch of a large-scale Spanish study assessing the effect of the Mediterranean diet on the risk of heart disease.

Over 5,800 people aged 55 to 80 years were recruited from the PREDIMED cardiovascular study. All were at risk of cardiovascular disease – for example, they had high blood pressure, or were overweight.

The participants completed a food frequency questionnaire asking them about how often they consumed various dairy products, and then were followed up for five years. During this time, 768 of them underwent cataract surgery.

Cataract risk was reduced by one-third among skimmed yogurt-eaters

The results brought good news for yogurt-consumers. Those participants who ate the most skimmed yogurt were significantly less likely to develop a cataract than those with a low intake. The risk was reduced by 38% in the medium group and by 29% in the high group.

‘The results… suggest that skimmed yogurt consumption was associated with a lower risk of cataract incidence in adult Mediterranean subjects at high cardiovascular risk’ – Camacho-Barcia L et al, 2018

None of the other dairy products studied (milk, whole yogurt, cheese, custard, cream, butter and ice cream) showed a similar protective effect although whole yogurt did show a non-significant protective trend.

Protection may be due to anti-inflammatory action or low fat content of yogurt

The authors suggest several possible ways in which skimmed yogurt might help protect against cataract. For instance, its low fat content could play a role, as fat consumption has previously been linked with a higher risk of cataract. The sugar, galactose, contained in yogurt could also have a beneficial effect by stimulating the activity of an enzyme in the intestine.

Yogurt may help quell inflammation involved in the formation of cataracts, say the authors. Indeed, an anti-inflammatory effect of probiotic yogurt has been reported.

The authors conclude that more research is needed to see clearly which of these mechanisms are at work.

 ‘…yogurt may play a protective role by taking part in the anti-inflammatory process’ – Camacho-Barcia L et al, 2018

Find out more: read the original article.

Source: Camacho-Barcia L, Bulló M, García-Gavilán JF, et al. Dairy products intake and the risk of incident cataracts surgery in an elderly Mediterranean population: results from the PREDIMED study. Eur J Nutr. 2018;Mar 27:1–9.