Soy is a popular vegetarian alternative protein on the Kimkins diet. Read on for new research which suggests it may not help in lowering blood cholesterol levels:
FRIDAY, Aug. 8
(HealthDay News) -- Eating foods with soy protein has been promoted as
a way to lower cholesterol, but a new study finds it has no significant
effect on cholesterol levels.
The findings "do not support the current health claims for soy
protein in a general population," said study author Peter R.C. Howe,
director of the Nutritional Physiology Research Centre at the Sansom
Institute for Health Research at the University of South Australia in
Adelaide.
He's referring to the health claims approved for soy foods in both
the United States and the United Kingdom that link daily consumption of
25 grams of soy protein to a reduction in heart disease risk through a
lowering of LDL, or "bad," cholesterol.
Howe's team studied 35 men and 58 women, average age 52, who had
mildly high cholesterol levels. He assigned each participant to rotate
through one of three diets for six weeks each. Each diet had varying
amounts of soy protein and isoflavones, substances in soy that some
experts say may have cholesterol-lowering powers.
One diet contributed 24 grams of soy protein and 71 milligrams of
isoflavone equivalents, one had 12 grams of dairy protein and 12 of soy
protein, with 76 milligrams of isoflavones. The dairy diet, which
served as the control, had 24 grams of dairy protein without
isoflavones.
Howe's team measured each person's blood cholesterol -- LDL, HDL and
trigylcerides -- at the start of the study and after each six-week diet.
They found no significant effect of the diets with either 24 grams or 12 grams of soy protein on LDL levels.
In his research, Howe also looked closely at whether a person's
ability to maximize the body's response to soy protein had a better
cholesterol-lowering effect. These people are termed "equol producers"
because of their above-average ability to make equol, a substance
produced in the intestines as a metabolite of a potent soy isoflavone
called daidzen. Equol is thought to inhibit LDL.
When Howe compared the cholesterol-lowering effects of those who
were equol producers with those who were not, he found no differences.
Howe's study was confined to those with mildly high cholesterol; he
said it may have an effect on those with higher cholesterol levels. And
the soy diets did lower triglycerides, a blood fat, by 4 percent.
The findings were published in the August issue of The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Even though the study found no effect of the soy protein on LDL
cholesterol, Dr. Frank Sacks, a professor of nutrition at Harvard
School of Public Health, called the research interesting. One facet he
finds especially intriguing, he said, is the finding that equol
producers have no benefit either.
After a series of studies on soy and its effect on cholesterol, the
American Heart Association's Nutrition Committee, of which Sacks is
vice-chairman, reviewed the evidence and issued an advisory, saying
there is "nothing special" about soy or isoflavones for improving
cholesterol and that the heart association doesn't recommend isoflavone
supplements.
However, "there are other benefits to soy foods," Sacks said. They
are healthy due to high levels of polyunsaturated fats, fiber, vitamins
and minerals. But, he added, "forget soy protein for lowering LDL."
More information
To learn more about LDL cholesterol, visit the American Heart Association.