Mormons have less heart disease - something doctors have long
chalked up to their religion's ban on smoking. New research suggests
that another of their "clean living" habits also may be helping their
hearts: fasting for one day each month.
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A study in Utah, where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints is based, found that people who skipped meals once a month were
about 40 percent less likely to be diagnosed with clogged arteries than
those who did not regularly fast.
People did not have to "get religion" to benefit: non-Mormons who
regularly took breaks from food also were less likely to have clogged
arteries, scientists found.
Far from proof
They concede that their study is far from proof that periodic
fasting is good for anyone, but said the benefit they observed poses a
theory that deserves further testing.
"It might suggest these are people who just control eating habits
better," and that this discipline extends to other areas of their lives
that improves their health, said Benjamin Horne, a heart disease
researcher from Intermountain Medical Centre and the University of Utah
in Salt Lake City.
He led the study and reported results at a recent American Heart
Association conference. The research was partly funded by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
Roughly 70 percent of Utah residents are Mormons, whose religion
advises abstaining from food on the first Sunday of each month, Horne
said.
Researchers got the idea to study fasting after analysing medical
records of patients who had X-ray exams to check for blocked heart
arteries between 1994 and 2002 in the Intermountain Health
Collaborative Study, a health registry. Of these patients, 4 629 could
be diagnosed as clearly having or lacking heart disease - an artery at
least 70 percent clogged.
Tobacco use part of the explanation
Researchers saw a typical pattern: only 61 percent of Mormons had
heart disease compared to 66 percent of non-Mormons. They thought
tobacco use probably accounted for the difference. But after taking
smoking into account, they still saw a lower rate of heart disease
among Mormons and designed a survey to explore why.
It asked about Mormons' religious practices: monthly fasting;
avoiding tea, coffee and alcohol; taking a weekly day of rest; going to
church, and donating time or money to charity.
Among the 515 people surveyed, only fasting made a significant
difference in heart risks: 59 percent of periodic meal skippers were
diagnosed with heart disease versus 67 percent of the others.
The difference persisted even when researchers took weight, age and
conditions like diabetes or high cholesterol or blood pressure into
account. About 8 percent of those surveyed were not Mormons, and those
who regularly fasted had lower rates of heart disease, too.
Horne speculated that when people take a break from food, it forces
the body to dip into fat reserves to burn calories. It also keeps the
body from being constantly exposed to sugar and having to make insulin
to metabolise it. When people develop diabetes, insulin-producing cells
become less sensitive to cues from eating, so fasting may provide brief
rests that resensitise these cells and make them work better, he said.
Skipping meals not advised
But he and other doctors cautioned that skipping meals is not
advised for diabetics - it could cause dangerous swings in blood sugar.
Also for dieters, "the news is not as good as you might think" on
fasting, said Dr Raymond Gibbons of the Mayo Clinic, a former heart
association president.
"Fasting resets the metabolic rate," slowing it down to adjust to
less food and forcing the body to store calories as soon as people
resume eating, Gibbons said. – (Sapa-AP)
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