Higher overall acidity of the diet, regardless of the individual foods
making up that diet, increases the risk of type 2 diabetes in women, a
new study has revealed.The study of more than 60,000 women was conducted by Dr Guy Fagherazzi
and Dr Francoise Clavel-Chapelon, Center for Research in Epidemiology
and Population Health, INSERM, Paris, France, and colleagues, and is the
first large prospective study to demonstrate these findings. A western diet rich in animal products and other acidogenic foods can
induce an acid load that is not compensated for by fruit and vegetables;
this can cause chronic metabolic acidosis and lead to metabolic
complications. A total of 66,485 women from the E3N study (the French Centre of the
European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition were
followed for new diabetes cases over 14 years. Their dietary acid load was calculated from their potential renal acid
load (PRAL) and their net endogenous acid production (NEAP) scores, both
standard techniques for assessing dietary acid consumption from
nutrient intake. During follow-up, 1,372 new cases of incident type 2 diabetes occurred.
In the overall population, those in the top 25 percent (quartile) for
PRAL had a 56 percent increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes
compared with the bottom quartile. Women of normal weight, BMI of 25 and under, had the highest increased
risk (96 percent for top quartile versus bottom) while overweight women
(BMI 25 and over) had only a 28 percent increased risk (top quartile
versus bottom). NEAP scores showed a similar increased risk for higher
acid load. "A diet rich in animal protein may favour net acid intake, while most
fruits and vegetables form alkaline precursors that neutralise the
acidity. Contrary to what is generally believed, most fruits such as
peaches, apples, pears, bananas and even lemons and oranges actually
reduce dietary acid load once the body has processed them," researchers
said. "In our study, the fact that the association between both PRAL and NEAP
scores and the risk of incident type 2 diabetes persisted after
adjustment for dietary patterns, meat consumption and intake of fruit,
vegetables, coffee and sweetened beverages suggests that dietary acids
may play a specific role in promoting the development of type 2
diabetes, irrespective of the foods or drinks that provide the acidic or
alkaline components," they added. The study is published in the journal Diabetologia.Source: ANI
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