Source - http://www.usatoday.com/
By - Mike Stobbe
Category - Hotels Near Marlins Park
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
Another reason to eat breakfast: Skipping it may increase your chances of a heart attack.
By - Mike Stobbe
Category - Hotels Near Marlins Park
Posted By - Homewood Suites Miami
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| Hotels Near Marlins Park |
A
study of older men found those who regularly skipped breakfast had a
27% higher risk of a heart attack than those who ate a morning meal.
There's no reason why the results wouldn't apply to other people, too,
the Harvard researchers said.
Other studies have suggested a link
between breakfast and obesity, high blood pressure, diabetes and other
health problems seen as precursors to heart problems.
"But no
studies looked at long-term risk of heart attack," said Eric Rimm, one
of the study authors at the Harvard School of Public Health.
Why would skipping breakfast be a heart attack risk?
Experts
aren't certain, but here's what they think: People who don't eat
breakfast are more likely to be hungrier later in the day and eat larger
meals. Those meals mean the body must process a larger amount of
calories in a shorter amount of time. That can spike sugar levels in the
blood and perhaps lead to clogged arteries.
But is a stack of syrupy pancakes, greasy eggs and lots of bacon really better than eating nothing?
The
researchers did not ask what the study participants ate for breakfast,
and were not prepared to pass judgment on whether a fatty, sugary
breakfast is better than no breakfast at all.
Other experts agreed that it's hard to say.
"We
don't know whether it's the timing or content of breakfast that's
important. It's probably both," said Andrew Odegaard, a University of
Minnesota researcher who has studied a link between skipping breakfast
and health problems like obesity and high blood pressure.
"Generally, people who eat breakfast tend to eat a healthier diet," he added.
The new research was released Monday by the journal Circulation.
It was an observational study, so it's not designed to prove a cause
and effect. But when done well, such studies can reveal important health
risks.
The researchers surveyed nearly 27,000 men about their
eating habits in 1992. About 13% of them said they regularly skipped
breakfast. They all were educated health professionals — like dentists
and veterinarians — and were at least 45.
Over the next 16 years,
1,527 suffered fatal or non-fatal heart attacks, including 171 who had
said they regularly skipped breakfast.
In other words, over 7% of the men who skipped breakfast had heart attacks, compared to nearly 6% of those who ate breakfast.
The
researchers calculated the increased risk at 27%, taking into account
other factors like smoking, drinking, diet and health problems like high
blood pressure and obesity.
As many as 18% of U.S. adults
regularly skip breakfast, according to federal estimates. So the study
could be important news for many, Rimm said.
"It's a really simple message," he said. "Breakfast is an important meal."

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