Cocoa, berries found to protect heart health during long sits

A hot cup of cocoa or tea, an apple or a bowlful of berries might help protect the heart health of couch potatoes or desk jockeys, a new study suggests.

Those foods and drinks are all rich in plant chemicals called flavanols, and a lab experiment showed that they might prevent blood vessel problems caused by too much sitting, researchers reported Wednesday in The Journal of Physiology.

“Consuming high-flavanol foods and drinks during periods spent sitting down is a good way to reduce some of the impact of inactivity on the vascular system,” said senior researcher Catarina Rendeiro, an assistant professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom.

“Given how common sedentary lifestyles have become and the increased risk this can have to vascular health, using flavanol-rich food and drink, especially in combination with breaking up periods of inactivity by going for a short walk or standing up, could be a good way to enhance long-term health, no matter the individual’s fitness level,” she said in a news release.

Previous studies have linked hardened arteries to an increased risk of heart disease, strokes and heart attacks, researchers said in background notes. Prolonged sitting is known to at least temporarily impair blood vessel flexibility, increasing blood pressure.

“Whether we are sitting at desks, behind the wheel of a car, on a train, or on the sofa reading a book or watching TV, we all spend a lot of time seated,” Rendeiro said. “Even though we are not moving our bodies, we are still putting them under stress.”

Flavanols occur naturally in some fruits, tea, nuts and cocoa beans, researchers said, and have been shown to protect blood vessel health during periods of mental stress.

To see whether flavanols might help protect blood vessel health, researchers recruited 40 healthy young men — 20 with a higher level of fitness and 20 who were less fit.

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