I'm
a chocolaholic. I've been a lover of chocolate in its myriad forms
from before I can remember. As a kid, it didn't get any better than
a box of chocolate chip cookies and a glass of milk. So I was intrigued
by recent articles about chocolate's newly discovered health benefits.
I'd certainly like to believe that chocolate is good for me. And
why not? Even Andrew Weil recommends dark chocolate.
Headline
grabbing stories in 2002 about chocolate's new-found health benefits
stemmed from a study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.1
The study was small, comprising only 23 subjects, and it was funded
by the American Cocoa Research Institute. The abstract (summary)
of the article, which is what most people read, stated that cocoa
and chocolate, when added to a healthy diet, provided antioxidant
benefits and increased the good HDL (high density lipoprotein) cholesterol.
One antioxidant benefit was to impede the harmful, atherosclerosis-accelerating
oxidation of LDL (low density lipoprotein cholesterol, the bad cholesterol).
These were the findings that the media trumpeted.
But
a closer look at the article wasn't quite as encouraging. The authors
acknowledged that the beneficial effects from chocolate were small
at best. "It is important to note that the clinical significance
of these small differences in indexes of oxidation status remain
to be clarified." Meaning that the small differences might
have no significance at all. And regarding the so-called benefits
of increasing HDL, these weren't significant, as the researchers
noted: "the cocoa-chocolate diet had neutral effects on lipids
and lipoproteins."
"I'd
certainly like to believe that chocolate is good for me. And why
not? Even Andrew Weil says so."
In
fact, as if anticipating that this study might be over-hyped, the
journal headed the issue with an editorial to put the findings in
perspective. In "How Good is Chocolate?" nutrition expert
Paul Nestel noted that plants supply many thousands of healthful
substances to the human diet. It is well known that soy, grapes,
tea, onions, apples, citrus and many others are rich sources of
antioxidants, so it's not surprising that cocoa contains an antioxidant,
too. How important is the antioxidant in chocolate? Nestel questioned
the importance of chocolate's modest effects on LDL oxidation. He
further asked, "Given that there are thousands of flavonoids
in the foods that we eat ... should each new finding be greeted
as an encouragement to eat that particular source because it contains
a special flavonoid?" 2
"Unfortunately
for chocolate lovers, chocolate's high content of stearic acid
puts it in the same category of risk of coronary disease as meat
and butter -- i.e., pathogenic!"
--
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Also
not mentioned was that chocolate contains a high amount of stearic
acid, a saturated fat, and saturated fats are directly linked to
elevated LDL cholesterol levels and to increased risks of coronary
artery disease and coronary death. Chocolate supporters claim that
stearic acid isn't like other saturated fats. Yet, in the Nurses'
Health Study Involving more than 80,000 women over 14 years, the
saturated fat in chocolate was shown to increase the risk of coronary
heart disease by as much or even more than other, proven-harmful
saturated fats.3
Stearic
acid also appears to reduce the protective HDL and may increase
tendencies toward fibrin and plaque deposition in the development
of atherosclerosis. Based on these and other findings, a 1999 editorial
in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition concluded: "Unfortunately
for chocolate lovers, chocolate's high content of stearic acid puts
it in the same category of risk of coronary disease as meat and
butter -- i.e., pathogenic!"4
Let's
put chocolate's "benefits" into perspective. First, you
can get similar antioxidants from almost any other plant-based foods.
Vegetables, fruits, and whole grains are much better sources of
antioxidants, and also contain many other healthful nutrients. And
unlike chocolate, they won't increase your waistline with extra
calories from sugar and fat.
Just
three ounces of Toll House semi-sweet chocolate contain 420
calories, 210 (50%) from fat and 168 (40%) from sugar. And the saturated
fat and simple sugar in chocolate are the kinds you want to avoid
the most. Indeed, even if cocoa contains some healthful flavonoids,
only 10% of the calories of Toll House semi-sweet chocolate come
from cocoa. The rest is junk.
Food
industry-funded studies notwithstanding, the bottom line on chocolate
is this: Chocolate is a terrific food, but it isn't a health food.
Use chocolate -- dark chocolate, not milk chocolate -- in moderation.
Dr. Stephen Sinatra, who is a cardiologist, a colleague, and also
a chocolate lover, suggests one ounce of dark chocolate a few times
a week. I can live with that.
One
ounce of dark chocolate three times a week.
Stephen
Sinatra, M.D., cardiologist.
In
fact, you can indulge yourself a lot more by using products and
recipes that combine cocoa with healthier fats and sweeteners rather
than manufactured chocolates. The food industry should work on this.
Providing "healthy chocolate" made of cocoa and healthy
ingredients would tap a big market of health-conscious chocolate
lovers like me. Maybe then I could write a truly enthusiastic article
about chocolate.
References
1.Wan, Y, Vinson, JA, Etherton, TD, et al. Effects
of cocoa powder and dark chocolate on LDL oxidative susceptibility
and prostaglandin concentrations in humans. American Journal
of Clinical Nutrition, Nov. 2001;74:596-602.
2. Nestel, PJ. How good is chocolate? American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Nov. 2001;74:563-4.
3. Hu, FB, Stamp, MJ, Manson, JE, et al. Dietary
saturated fats and their food sources in relation to the risk of
coronary heart disease in women. American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, Dec. 1999;70:1001-1008.
4. Connor, WE. Harbingers of coronary heart disease:
dietary saturated fatty acids and cholesterol. Is chocolate benign
because of its stearic acid content? American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition, Dec. 1999;70:951-952.
Copyright
2003, Jay S. Cohen, M.D. All rights reserved. Readers have my permission
to copy and disseminate all or part of these articles if it is clearly
identified as the work of: Jay S. Cohen, M.D., The Free Underground
MedicationSense E-Newsletter, July-August 2003, www.MedicationSense.com.
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