Newly published research
led by Dr. David Spence of Western University, Canada, shows that eating egg
yolks accelerates atherosclerosis in a manner similar to smoking cigarettes.
Surveying more than 1200 patients, Dr. Spence found regular consumption of egg
yolks is about two-thirds as bad as smoking when it comes to increased build-up
of carotid plaque, a risk factor for stroke and heart attack. The research is
published online in the journal Atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis, also
called coronary artery disease, is a disorder of the arteries where plaques,
aggravated by cholesterol, form on the inner arterial wall. Plaque rupture is
the usual cause of most heart attacks and many strokes. The study looked at
data from 1231 men and women, with a mean age of 61.5, who were patients
attending vascular prevention clinics at London Health Sciences Centre’s
University Hospital. Ultrasound was used to establish a measurement of total
plaque area and questionnaires were filled out regarding their lifestyle and
medications including pack-years of smoking (number of packs per day of
cigarettes times the number of years), and the number of egg yolks consumed per
week times the number of years consumed (egg yolk-years).
The researchers found
carotid plaque area increased linearly with age after age 40, but increased
exponentially with pack-years of smoking and egg yolk-years. In other words,
compared to age, both tobacco smoking and egg yolk consumption accelerate
atherosclerosis. The study also found those eating three or more yolks a week
had significantly more plaque area than those who ate two or fewer yolks per
week.
“The mantra ‘eggs can be
part of a healthy diet for healthy people’ has confused the issue. It has been
known for a long time that a high cholesterol intake increases the risk of
cardiovascular events, and egg yolks have a very high cholesterol content. In
diabetics, an egg a day increases coronary risk by two to five-fold,” says Dr.
Spence, a Professor of Neurology at Western’s Schulich School of Medicine &
Dentistry and the Director of its Stroke Prevention and Atherosclerosis
Research Centre (SPARC) at the Robarts Research Institute. “What we have shown
is that with aging, plaque builds up gradually in the arteries of Canadians,
and egg yolks make it build up faster – about two-thirds as much as smoking. In
the long haul, egg yolks are not okay for most Canadians.”
Dr. Spence adds the
effect of egg yolk consumption over time on increasing the amount of plaque in
the arteries was independent of sex, cholesterol, blood pressure, smoking, body
mass index and diabetes. And while he says more research should be done to take
in possible confounders such as exercise and waist circumference, he stresses
that regular consumption of egg yolk should be avoided by persons at risk of
cardiovascular disease.
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