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January 2002, Volume 56, Number 1, Pages 1-14
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Review
Cereal grains and coronary heart disease
A S Truswell

Biochemistry Department, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

Correspondence to: A S Truswell, Biochemistry Department, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia

Guarantor: AS Truswell.

Contributors: AS Truswell.

Abstract

Cereal grains and their products provide around 30% of total energy intake in British adults, (much more than any of the other major food groups). Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the largest single cause of death in Britain and many other Western countries. This review examines the question whether there is a relation between cereal consumption and CHD.

Several of the nutrients in cereals have known potential for reducing risk factors for CHD: the linoleic acid, fibre, vitamin E, selenium and folate. Cereals also contain phytoestrogens of the lignan family and several phenolic acids with antioxidant properties. Processing generally reduces the content of these nutrients and bioprotective substances. Although cereals at the farm gate are very low in salt, processed cereal foods, eg bread and some breakfast cereals, are high-salt foods and thus could contribute to raising blood pressure.

Human experiments have clearly shown that oat fibre tends to lower plasma total and LDL cholesterol but wheat fibre does not. Rice bran and barley may also lower cholesterol but most people do not eat enough barley to have an effect. Cereal foods with low glycaemic index such as pasta and oats are beneficial for people with diabetes and might lower plasma lipids.

Between 1996 and 2001 an accumulation of five very large cohort studies in the USA, Finland and Norway have all reported that subjects consuming relatively large amounts of whole grain cereals have significantly lower rates of CHD. This confirms an earlier report from a small British cohort. The protective effect does not seem to be due to cholesterol-lowering. While cohort studies have shown this consistent protective effect of whole grain cereals, there has been (only one) randomised controlled secondary prevention trial of advice to eat more cereal fibre. In this there was no reduction of the rate of reinfarction. The trial had some weaknesses, eg there were eight different diets, compliance was not checked objectively, and duration was for only 2 y.

It appears valid to make health claims (as now permitted by the US FDA) that whole grain cereal foods and oat meal or bran may reduce the risk of CHD.

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2002) 56, 1-14. DOI: 10.1038/sj/ejcn/1601283

Keywords

cereal grains; dietary fibre; coronary heart disease; plasma cholesterol; prospective cohort studies

Received 13 February 2001; revised 30 May 2001; accepted 6 June 2001
January 2002, Volume 56, Number 1, Pages 1-14
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Full text  PDF
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