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Friday, April 26, 2013
Eggs, Too, May Provoke Bacteria to Raise Heart Risk
For the second time in a matter of weeks, a group of
researchers reported a link between the food people eat and bacteria in the
intestines that can increase the risk of heart attacks.
The lecithin
study, published Wednesday in The New
England Journal of Medicine, is part of a growing appreciation of the role
the body’s bacteria play in health and disease. With heart disease,
investigators have long focused on the role of diet and heart disease, but
expanding the scrutiny to bacteria adds a new dimension.
“Heart
disease perhaps involves microbes in our gut,” said the study’s lead
researcher, Dr. Stanley Hazen, chairman of the department of cellular and
molecular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute.
(..)
To show the effect of eggs on TMAO, Dr. Hazen asked
volunteers to eat two hard-boiled eggs. They ended up with more TMAO in their
blood. But if they first took an antibiotic to wipe out intestinal bacteria,
eggs did not have that effect.
To see the effects of TMAO on cardiovascular risk, the
investigators studied 4,000 people who had been seen at the Cleveland Clinic.
The more TMAO in their blood, the more likely they were to have a heart attack
or stroke in the ensuing three years.
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