Feeling guilty about that burger? Eat some wild blueberries to 'undo' the damage of a high-fat diet

December 23, 2014  12:52

A handful of bilberries a day could help reduce the impact of a high-fat diet, scientists have found. Eating the small, blue, flat-topped fruit - the wilder, more acidic version of a blueberry - diminishes the harmful effects of eating a lot of fat.

According to The Daily Mail, for the first time, the berries were shown to have beneficial effects on both blood pressure and inflammation.

Inflammation is the body’s natural immune response and is initially beneficial, but can cause several conditions and diseases in the long term.

The researchers believe the beneficial health effects of bilberries are due to high levels of polyphenols, a disease-fighting chemical component significantly higher in bilberries than in commercially-cultivated blueberries.

As part of the study, carried out by the University of Eastern Finland, mice were fed high-fat diet for a period of three months.

Some of the mice were also fed either 5 per cent or 10 per cent of freeze-dried bilberries in the diet.

The researchers assessed the effects of the diets by looking at levels of inflammation in cells.

Obese people have higher levels of inflammation, and even low levels are often associated with obesity-related diseases such as type 2 diabetes, heart disease and stroke, as is high blood pressure.

They measured inflammation levels by looking at cytokines, substances produced from white blood cells which trigger the body’s immune response. High levels are a marker of inflammation.

The researchers also measured levels of glucose in the blood, as high levels can lead to diabetes, and insulin sensitivity - whether the body is sensitive to the hormone which breaks down sugar.

Lastly, they measured blood pressure and weight gain.

These are all factors which increase the risk of obesity-related diseases.

They found mice on the high-fat diet gained significant amounts of weight.

Researchers noted detrimental changes in their glucose, fat metabolism, blood pressure and inflammation.

But bilberries, they found, diminished the inflammatory effects of the high-fat diet.

Bilberries also prevented the raised blood pressure caused by the fatty foods.

The researchers said the berries – which are an integral part of the Nordic diet - could be better utilised elsewhere in the world.

‘Bilberries are associated with several beneficial health effects and their use involves plenty of traditional wisdom,’ they wrote in the study.

They explained that this is probably due to high levels of the disease fighting chemicals polyphenols present in blueberries. 

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