Different sources of protein have different beneficial effects on cardiovascular health. [Photo: Bigstock]

High protein foods boost cardiovascular health

5 October, 2015

Natural Health News — Eating foods rich in amino acids could be as good for your heart as stopping smoking or getting more exercise, according to recent research.

People who diets include high levels of certain amino acids found in meat and plant-based protein have lower blood pressure and arterial stiffness – and the magnitude of the association is similar to those previously reported for lifestyle risk factors including salt intake, physical activity, alcohol consumption and smoking.

Researchers from the UK’s University of East Anglia investigated the effect of seven amino acids on cardiovascular health among almost 2,000 women with a healthy BMI. Data came from TwinsUK – the biggest UK adult twin registry of 12,000 twins which is used to study the genetic and environmental causes of age related disease.

What you need to know

» New research suggests that high levels of certain amino acids found in meat and plant-based protein have the power to lower blood pressure and arterial stiffness.

» But, say the researchers, the food source is important; amino acids from plant-based sources were associated with lower blood pressure, while higher intake from animal sources was associated with lower levels of arterial stiffness.

» The magnitude of the effect was as great as making lifestyle changes such as reducing salt intake and alcohol consumption and increasing physical activity.

They studied their diet and compared it to clinical measures of blood pressure and blood vessel thickness and stiffness.

The study in the Journal of Nutrition found strong evidence that those who consumed the highest amounts of amino acids had lower measures of blood pressure and arterial stiffness.

Different benefits from different food sources

But they found that the food source was important – with a higher intake of amino acids from plant-based sources associated with lower blood pressure, and a higher intake from animal sources associated with lower levels of arterial stiffness.

Lead researcher Dr Amy Jennings, from UEA’s Norwich Medical School, said: “This research shows a protective effect of several amino acids on cardiovascular health.

“Increasing intake from protein-rich foods such as meat, fish, dairy produce, beans, lentils, broccoli and spinach could be an important and readily achievable way to reduce people’s risk of cardiovascular disease.

“Results from previous studies have provided evidence that increased dietary protein may be associated with lower blood pressure. We wanted to know whether protein from animal sources or plant-based sources was more beneficial – so we drilled down and looked at the different amino acids found in both meat and vegetables.

The research team studied seven amino acids – arginine, cysteine, glutamic acid, glycine, histidine, leucine, and tyrosine. Glutamic acid, leucine, and tyrosine are found in animal sources, and a higher intake was associated with lower levels of arterial stiffness.

All seven amino acids, but particularly those from plant-based sources, were associated with lower blood pressure.

A significant effect

“The really surprising thing that we found is that amino acid intake has as much of an effect on blood pressure as established lifestyle risk factors such as salt intake, physical activity and alcohol consumption. For arterial stiffness, the association was similar to the magnitude of change previously associated with not smoking.” said Jennings

High blood pressure is one of the most potent risk factors for developing cardiovascular disease. A reduction in blood pressure leads to a reduction in mortality caused by stroke or coronary heart disease – so changing your diet to include more meat, fish, dairy produce and pulses could help both prevent and treat the condition.

We need around 75g of protein per day – more is you are pregnant or physically active. A 75g portion of steak contains 25 g protein as does a 100g salmon fillet or a 500ml glass of skimmed, two medium eggs provide around 14g protein and 100g of cooked lentils contains around 10g of protein, as does 100g tofu.

Co-author Prof Tim Spector, from the department of Twin Research at King’s College London, said: “The finding that eating certain meat and plant proteins are linked to healthier blood pressure is an exciting finding. We need to understand the mechanism to see if it is direct or via our gut microbes.”