THURSDAY, April 10 (HealthDay News) -- A new study suggests that
consuming more than six eggs a week seems to raise the risk of
dying from all causes.
And diabetics seem to face an even higher mortality risk,
according to the study that was limited to men.
"The more eggs diabetic men consumed, the more they increased
their risk for death," said study lead author Dr. Luc Djousse, an
associate epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and an
assistant professor at Harvard Medical School in Boston.
Djousse and his team analyzed egg consumption and mortality data
among more than 21,000 men who had participated in a Physician's
Health Study that explored heart disease and cancer prevention
among American male doctors.
Participants ranged in age from 40 to 86. Over an average of 20
years, all the doctors completed annual written questionnaires on
daily egg consumption, stroke and heart attack incidence, diabetes
status, cholesterol levels, alcohol and smoking habits, and general
dietary information.
On average, the physicians were found to have consumed one egg a
week -- a rate the study authors termed "relatively low."
Overall, egg consumption wasn't found to be associated with
heart attack or stroke risk. And consumption of up to six eggs a
week also wasn't found to be associated with a higher risk of death
from all causes. But eating seven or more eggs a week among healthy
study participants was linked to a 23 percent higher risk of
death.
Even more striking was the finding that mortality risk was much
higher among those doctors with diabetes. Consuming seven or more
eggs a week doubled their risk of death from all causes, compared
with diabetic doctors who ate just one egg each week.
The findings were published in the April issue of
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United
States, and elevated LDL ("bad") cholesterol is a prime risk factor
for cardiovascular trouble. And while eggs are rich in cholesterol
-- and circulating cholesterol is related to the risk of
cardiovascular disease -- the relationship between dietary
cholesterol and blood cholesterol is complex. Some studies have
suggested that dietary cholesterol doesn't affect blood cholesterol
levels in many people, but it may in other individuals, such as
those with diabetes, the researchers noted.
A single egg contains about 200 milligrams of cholesterol --
just 100 milligrams shy of the daily limit advocated for those at
risk for heart disease, the researchers added.
On the other hand, eggs are a source of minerals, folate, B
vitamins, protein and monounsaturated fats -- all of which have the
potential to lower overall risk.
To explain the finding on diabetic men, the researchers
theorized that diabetics might somehow convert dietary cholesterol
more readily into blood cholesterol than people without
diabetes.
"We need additional data to confirm these findings, so it's kind
of premature to advise against egg consumption until we have more
information," Djousse said.
Donald McNamara, executive director of the Washington,
D.C.-based Egg Nutrition Center, said that while diabetics need to
carefully assess all aspects of their diet, "no one food exists in
isolation."
"And when we look at all the other studies that have been
published, they show that easily an egg a day can fit into a
healthy diet with no change in heart-disease risk for the average
person and those with diabetes," McNamara added. "Eggs also provide
some very important nutrients in terms of high quality protein and
choline, which we know is insufficient in the diet today. So, you
have to balance out the nutritional contribution of eggs in the
diet relative to this kind of a study, which presents a very unique
finding which has not been presented anywhere else, and has a lot
of variables included that we don't know enough about."
In an accompanying editorial published in the journal, Dr.
Robert H. Eckel, a professor of physiology and biophysics at the
University of Colorado and co-chair of both the Cardiometabolic
Health Congress and the Committee on Cardiovascular and Metabolic
Diseases, echoed some of McNamara's comments and called for more
research to validate the study findings.
"Eggs are like all other foods -- they are neither 'good' nor
'bad', and they can be part of an overall heart-healthy diet,"
Eckel said. But he suggested that those wary of the high
cholesterol content in whole eggs might want to skip yolks in favor
of egg whites, which are ripe with protein, riboflavin and
selenium.
And Lona Sandon, a registered dietician and assistant professor
of clinical nutrition at the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center at Dallas, said that "the white part of the egg is
the gold standard for protein."
"It contains all the essential immunoacids that your muscle
needs for building," she said. "It's better than beef even. And
it's one of the cheapest sources of protein as well. There are some
good things in the yolk as well. But for someone who has had their
cholesterol measured and found to have high LDL, the American Heart
Association and the American Dietetic Association say watch your
egg consumption, and try not to consume more than two yolks per
week."
More information
For additional information on nutrition and diabetes, visit the
American Diabetes Association.