A diet rich in red meat has been linked to a heightened risk of a bowel inflammation called diverticulitis, according to a study published Tuesday.
The findings do not constitute
evidence that meat is what causes the ailment, researchers said, but ought to
be considered in designing healthier diets.
Diverticulitis is a common condition
which occurs when small pockets lining the intestine — called diverticula —
become irritated.
It accounts for some 200,000
hospital admissions every year in the United States alone, at an annual cost of
about $2 billion (1.9 billion euros).New cases are on the rise, especially
among young people.
About four percent of those affected
develop severe or long-term symptoms, such as piercing of the gut wall,
abscesses, and fistula, the abnormal joining together of hollow spaces within
the body.
Despite its prevalence and impact,
little is known about what causes diverticulitis, though previous research
found links to smoking, obesity and chronic use of anti-inflammation drugs.
A lack of fibre in the diet has also
been a suspect, but other possible food-related causes have remained untested.
For the new study, published in the
journal Gut, researchers led by Andrew Chan at Massachusetts General Hospital
combed through 26 years of medical records for 46,500 men in the United States.
Every four years, the men were asked
to detail their intake of fish, poultry and red meat.
Over the 26-year period, 764 men
developed diverticulitis. This group tended to eat a lot of red meat.
They also smoked more, exercised
less, and took more painkillers than others in the trial, the study found.
But after these other disease risks
were taken into account, the meat-eaters were nearly 60 percent more likely to
be afflicted by the condition than men who ate the least amount red meat, the
study found.
The link was purely observational,
meaning that no cause-and-effect can be shown, and that something else may be
to blame.
But the evidence may be useful as
“practical dietary guidance” for people at risk of diverticulitis, the authors
said.
Source: AFP via Guardian
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