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Fast-Food Breakfast Sandwiches May Slow Down Blood Flow: Study
Blood vessels acted differently after downing of two high-fat servings

By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

TUESDAY, Oct. 30 (HealthDay News) -- Think about this the next time you chow down on one of those meat-egg-and-cheese breakfast sandwiches: A new study suggests that your fast-food breakfast sandwich has an immediate negative effect on your blood vessels.

The research is preliminary and doesn't compare the effect of eating a couple of fast-food breakfast sandwiches to a healthier choice such as yogurt and a banana. Still, the study hints at the dangers of unhealthy food, said co-author Dr. Todd Anderson, director of the University of Calgary's Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta.

"Even one episode of eating something unhealthy can have an effect," he said, "and cumulatively, that can have an effect. Think before you eat."

The purpose of the study was to examine what happens in the blood vessels after someone eats a high-fat, high-salt meal.

The researchers recruited 20 healthy people, with an average age of 23, to undergo tests that measure how efficiently blood travels through the vessels in their forearms. Some students fasted while others ate two fast-food breakfast sandwiches, and then the groups switched.

Anderson declined to identify the brand of breakfast sandwich because, he said, its identity shouldn't be a focus of the attention given to the research. However, he did say it's a ham, cheese and egg sandwich -- with 25 grams of fat and 450 calories -- that "you could buy anyplace in America or Canada."

Compared to the participants who hadn't eaten recently, the blood vessels of those who ate two breakfast sandwiches worked less efficiently two hours after the meal, Anderson said. "There was a decrease in the ability of the small vessels of the forearm to dilate and generate blood flow," he explained.

This dilation -- widening of the vessels -- helps the blood get more oxygen to the body when you exercise. Other research has suggested that disruptions in this process over time make people more susceptible to develop strokes and heart attacks, Anderson said.

The study didn't examine what would happen if someone ate a healthy meal. Anderson said previous research suggests healthy food wouldn't have had a negative effect.

It's also not clear what would happen if people ate this kind of food continuously, nor what different kinds of fast food (say, a hamburger and fries) would do to the blood vessels.

So what does the research mean? It suggests how trouble in the vessels begins due to an unhealthy diet, Anderson said. "High levels of fat, salt or cholesterol can cause blood vessels to be abnormal, which can increase the risk of heart attack or stroke," he said.

The study was scheduled to be released Tuesday at the Canadian Cardiovascular Congress meeting in Toronto.

HealthDay reached out to the National Restaurant Association but a comment was not made available at press time.

Chris Fahs, a graduate assistant at the University of Oklahoma's department of health and exercise science who studies blood vessels, cautioned against taking general messages from the study.

"It's hard to say how one specific food impacts a person's risk for health problems. With nutrition there are so many variables that can be changed," Fahs said. "Too much of any one food will probably have negative consequences in the long term, but eating that food in combination with other foods which meet a person's nutritional needs may not have same impact on the vascular system."

In addition, Fahs said, "the field of nutrition is very conflicting when it comes to dietary recommendations for the prevention of cardiovascular disease."

Because this study was presented at a medical meeting, the data and conclusions should be viewed as preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal.

More information

For details about a healthy diet, try the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

SOURCES: Todd Anderson, M.D., director, Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta, University of Calgary, Canada; Chris Fahs, graduate assistant, department of health and exercise science, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Okla.; Oct. 30, 2012, presentation, Canadian Cardiovascular Congress meeting, Toronto

Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved. URL:http://www.healthscout.com/template.asp?id=670153

Resources from HONselect: HONselect is the HON's medical search engine. It retrieves scientific articles, images, conferences and web sites on the selected subject.
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