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Super Foods that Heal Oats PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Toma Grubb   
Friday, 16 February 2007

oatsOats, oat bran, and oatmeal contain a specific type of fiber known as beta-glucan. Whole grain oats are preferred to highly processed oats. Whole oats have a lower glycemic index than processed oats such as oatmeal. Oatmeal (quick cooking) has a glycemic indexi of 66, steel cut oats has a GI of 42. This happens because as a grain is processed its Glycemic index (how fast a food raises your blood glucose) number goes up. Putting it another way, raw oats would have the lowest glycemic index. Next would be cooked whole oats or groats. Steel cut oats (scotch oats) would be lower than old-fashioned rolled oats and the oats with the highest glycemic index value would be instant oats. Food manufacturers would have you believe instant oatmeal would be just as good for you as steel cut oats or groats but this is clearly not the case.

Oats, known scientifically as Avena sativa, are a hardy cereal grain able to withstand poor soil conditions in which other crops are unable to thrive. Their fortitude seems to be transferred to those who consume this nutrient-rich grain. After all, when we think of a satisfying and enriching way to start the day, one that gives us strength and lasting energy, we oftentimes relish the thought of a hot bowl of oatmeal.

Oats gain part of their distinctive flavor from the roasting process that they undergo after being harvested and cleaned. Although oats are then hulled, this process does not strip away their bran and their germ allowing them to retain a concentrated source of their fiber and nutrients. Different types of processing are then used to produce the various types of oat products, which are generally used to make breakfast cereals, baked goods and stuffings.

 

  •  Oat groats: unflattened kernels that are good for using as a breakfast cereal or for stuffing
  • Steel-cut oats: featuring a dense and chewy texture, they are produced by running the grain through steel blades that thinly slices them.
  • Old-fashioned oats: have a flatter shape that is the result of their being steamed and then rolled.
  • Quick-cooking oats: processed like old-fashioned oats, except they are cut finely before rolling
  • Instant oatmeal: produced by partially cooking the grains and then rolling them very thin. Oftentimes, sugar, salt and other ingredients are added to make the finished product.
  • Oat bran: the outer layer of the grain that resides under the hull. While oat bran is found in rolled oats and steel-cut oats, it may also be purchased as a separate product that can be added to recipes or cooked to make a hot cereal.
  • Oat flour: used in baking, it is oftentimes combined with wheat or other gluten-containing flours when making leavened bread.

Since 1963, study after study has proven the beneficial effects of this special fiber on cholesterol levels. Studies show that in individuals with high cholesterol (above 220 mg/dl), consuming just 3 grams of soluble oat fiber per day (an amount found in one bowl of oatmeal) typically lowers total cholesterol by 8-23%. This is highly significant since each 1% drop in serum cholesterol translates to a 2% decrease in the risk of developing heart disease. High cholesterol levels correlate with the build up of plaques in blood vessel walls. If these plaques become damaged or simply grow too large, they can rupture, blocking a blood vessel and causing a heart attack, stroke, or blood clots elsewhere in the body. Lowering high cholesterol levels can therefore significantly reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke. A study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine confirms that eating high fiber foods, such as oats, helps prevent heart disease. Almost 10,000 American adults participated in this study and were followed for 19 years. People eating the most fiber, 21 grams per day, had 12% less coronary heart disease (CHD) and 11% less cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to those eating the least, 5 grams daily. Those eating the most water-soluble dietary fiber fared even better with a 15% reduction in risk of CHD and a 10% risk reduction in CVD.

Unique Oat Antioxidants Reduce Risk of Cardiovascular Disease

Oats, via their high fiber content, are already known to help remove cholesterol from the digestive system that would otherwise end up in the bloodstream. Now, the latest research suggests they may have another cardio-protective mechanism.

Antioxidant compounds unique to oats, called avenanthramides, help prevent free radicals from damaging LDL cholesterol, thus reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, suggests a study conducted at Tufts University and published in The Journal of Nutrition.

Significant Cardiovascular Benefits for Postmenopausal Women

Eating a serving of whole grains, such as oats, at least 6 times each week is an especially good idea for postmenopausal women with high cholesterol, high blood pressure or other signs of cardiovascular disease (CVD).

A 3-year prospective study of over 200 postmenopausal women with CVD, published in the American Heart Journal, shows that those eating at least 6 servings of whole grains each week experienced both:

  • Slowed progression of atherosclerosis, the build-up of plaque that narrows the vessels through which blood flows, and
  • Less progression in stenosis, the narrowing of the diameter of arterial passageways.

The women's intake of fiber from fruits, vegetables and refined grains was not associated with a lessening in CVD progression.

Enhance Immune Response to Infection

In laboratory studies reported in Surgery, beta-glucan significantly enhanced the human immune system's response to bacterial infection. Beta-glucan not only helps neutrophils (the most abundant type of non-specific immune cell) navigate to the site of an infection more quickly, it also enhances their ability to eliminate the bacteria they find there.

According to study leader Jonathan Reichner of the Department of Surgery at Rhode Island Hospital and Brown University, priming neutrophils with beta-glucan helps these immune defenders quickly locate the bacterial mother lode within infected tissue. And this more rapid response to infection results in faster microbial clearance and healing. Since our non-specific immune defenses are the body's first strike forces against invading pathogens, starting your day with a bowl of oatmeal may boost your immune response in addition to your morning energy levels.

Stabilize Blood Sugar

Studies also show that beta-glucan has beneficial effects in diabetes as well. Type 2 diabetes patients given foods high in this type of oat fiber or given oatmeal or oat bran rich foods experienced much lower rises in blood sugar compared to those who were given white rice or bread. Starting out your day with a blood sugar stabilizing food such as oats may make it easier to keep blood sugar levels under control the rest of the day, especially when the rest of your day is also supported with nourishing fiber-rich foods.

Oats and Other Whole Grains Substantially Lower Type 2 Diabetes Risk

Oats and other whole grains are a rich source of magnesium, a mineral that acts as a co-factor for more than 300 enzymes, including enzymes involved in the body's use of glucose and insulin secretion.

The FDA permits foods that contain at least 51% whole grains by weight (and are also low in fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol) to display a health claim stating consumption is linked to lower risk of heart disease and certain cancers. Now, research suggests regular consumption of whole grains also reduces risk of type 2 diabetes. (van Dam RM, Hu FB, Diabetes Care).

In this 8-year trial, involving 41,186 particpants of the Black Women's Health Study, research data confirmed inverse associations between magnesium, calcium and major food sources in relation to type 2 diabetes that had already been reported in predominantly white populations.

Risk of type 2 diabetes was 31% lower in black women who frequently ate whole grains compared to those eating the least of these magnesium-rich foods. When the women's dietary intake of magnesium intake was considered by itself, a beneficial, but lesser-19%-reduction in risk of type 2 diabetes was found, indicating that whole grains offer special benefits in promoting healthy blood sugar control. Daily consumption of low-fat dairy foods was also helpful, lowering risk of type 2 diabetes by 13%. Enjoy a hearty breakfast and get the benefits of both oats and dairy by serving hot oatmeal, spiced with cinnamon, and topped with handful of walnuts and low-fat milk.

Antioxidant Benefits

In addition to its fiber benefits, oats are also a very good source of selenium. A necessary cofactor of the important antioxidant, glutathione peroxidase, selenium works with vitamin E in numerous vital antioxidant systems throughout the body. These powerful antioxidant actions make selenium helpful in decreasing asthma symptoms and in the prevention of heart disease. In addition, selenium is involved in DNA repair and is associated with a reduced risk for cancer, especially colon cancer.

Health-Promoting Activity Equal to or Even Higher than that of Vegetables and Fruits

Research reported at the American Institute for Cancer Research (AICR) International Conference on Food, Nutrition and Cancer, by Rui Hai Liu, M.D., Ph.D., and his colleagues at Cornell University shows that whole grains, such as oats, contain many powerful phytonutrients whose activity has gone unrecognized because research methods have overlooked them.

Despite the fact that for years researchers have been measuring the antioxidant power of a wide array of phytonutrients, they have typically measured only the "free" forms of these substances, which dissolve quickly and are immediately absorbed into the bloodstream. They have not looked at the "bound" forms, which are attached to the walls of plant cells and must be released by intestinal bacteria during digestion before they can be absorbed.

Phenolics, powerful antioxidants that work in multiple ways to prevent disease, are one major class of phytonutrients that have been widely studied. Included in this broad category are such compounds as quercetin, curcumin, ellagic acid, catechins, and many others that appear frequently in the health news.

When Dr. Liu and his colleagues measured the relative amounts of phenolics, and whether they were present in bound or free form, in common fruits and vegetables like apples, red grapes, broccoli and spinach, they found that phenolics in the "free" form averaged 76% of the total number of phenolics in these foods. In whole grains, however, "free" phenolics accounted for less than 1% of the total, while the remaining 99% were in "bound" form.

Dr. Liu's findings may help explain why studies have shown that populations eating diets high in fiber-rich whole grains consistently have lower risk for colon cancer, yet short-term clinical trials that have focused on fiber alone in lowering colon cancer risk, often to the point of giving subjects isolated fiber supplements, yield inconsistent results. The explanation is most likely that these studies have not taken into account the interactive effects of all the nutrients in whole grains-not just their fiber, but also their many phytonutrients. As far as whole grains are concerned, Dr. Liu believes that the key to their powerful cancer-fighting potential is precisely their wholeness. A grain of whole wheat consists of three parts-its endosperm (starch), bran and germ. When wheat-or any whole grain-is refined, its bran and germ are removed. Although these two parts make up only 15-17% of the grain's weight, they contain 83% of its phenolics. Dr. Liu says his recent findings on the antioxidant content of whole grains reinforce the message that a variety of foods should be eaten good health. "Different plant foods have different phytochemicals," he said. "These substances go to different organs, tissues and cells, where they perform different functions. What your body needs to ward off disease is this synergistic effect - this teamwork - that is produced by eating a wide variety of plant foods, including whole grains."

Lignans Protect against Heart Disease

One type of phytochemical especially abundant in whole grains including oats are plant lignans, which are converted by friendly flora in our intestines into mammalian lignans, including one called enterolactone that is thought to protect against breast and other hormone-dependent cancers as well as heart disease. In addition to whole grains, nuts, seeds and berries are rich sources of plant lignans, and vegetables, fruits, and beverages such as coffee, tea and wine also contain some. When blood levels of enterolactone were measured in over 800 postmenopausal women in a Danish study published in the Journal of Nutrition, women eating the most whole grains were found to have significantly higher blood levels of this protective lignan. Women who ate more cabbage and leafy vegetables also had higher enterolactone levels.

A Well-tolerated Wheat Alternative for Children and Adults with Celiac Disease

Although treatment of celiac disease has been thought to require lifelong avoidance of the protein gluten, which is found in wheat, rye, barley and oats, recent studies of adults have shown that oats, despite the small amount of gluten they contain, are well-tolerated. Now, a double blind, multi-center study involving 8 clinics treating 116 children newly diagnosed celiac disease suggests oats are a good grain choice for children with celiac disease as well. The children were randomly assigned to receive either the standard gluten-free diet (no wheat, barley, rye or oats) or a gluten-free diet with some wheat-free oat products. At the end of the study, which ran for a year, all the children were doing well, and in both groups, the mucosal lining of the small bowel (which is damaged by wheat gluten in celiac disease) had healed and the immune system (which is excessively reactive in celiac patients) had returned to normal.

 

Oats

Nutrition Facts

 serving size:  servings: 11.0

  Calories per serving:

calories 389.00;Calories from fat 6.9

% daily value*

 Total Fat 6.9
   Saturated Fat 1.2
   Trans Fat 0.00 g
  Polyunsaturated Fat 2.53 g
   Monounsaturated fat 2.18 g
Cholesterol 0.00 mg
Sodium 2.00 mg
Potassium 429.00 mg
Total Carbohydrate 66.27 g
Net Carbohydrate 55.67 g
   Dietary fiber 10.60 g
   Sugars 0.00 g
Protien 16.89 g
Vitamin A 0.00            Vitamin C 0.00 mg
Calcium 54.00 mg             Iron 4.72 mg
Actual values are used in this label instead of % of DRV
Total Protien 17.12% 
Total Carbohydrate 67.15% 
Total Fat 15.73% 
 

Serves 1.0    •   
389.00 Calories per serving.    •    PCF Ratio: 17-67-16
Protein  per serving: 16.89 g g    •    Carbohydrate per serving: 66.27 g g    •

   Fat per serving: 6.90 g g

Ingredients:
100 grams - GRAIN, OATS




Complete Nutrient Analysis:

 

Nutrient

 

 

Calories  389.00

Food Energy (kj) 1627.58 kj

 

Protein (g) 16.89 g

Calories from Protein 66.58

% Calories from Protein 17.12

Carbohydrates (g) 66.27 g

Calories from Carbohydrates  261.23

% Calories from Carbohydrates 67.15

Est. Net Carbs (g) 55.67 g

Starch (g)* 0.00 g

Sugars (g) 0.00 g

Glucose (g)* 0.00 g

Fructose (g)* 0.00 g

Galactose (g)* 0.00 g

Sucrose (g)* 0.00 g

Lactose (g)* 0.00 g

Maltose (g)* 0.00 g

Dietary Fiber (g) 10.60 g

   

   

Total Fat (g) 6.90 g

Calories from Fat 61.20

% Calories from Fat 15.73

Saturated Fat (g) 1.22 g

 

 

Trans Fat (g) 0.00 g

Trans-Monoenoic Fat (g)0.00 g

Trans-Polyenoic Fat (g) 0.00 g

Monounsaturated Fat (g) 2.18 g

Polyunsaturated Fat (g) 2.53 g

Omega-3 (g) 0.00 g

Omega-6 (g) 0.00 g

 

 

Cholesterol (mg) 0.00 mg

Ash (g) 1.72 g

Water (g) 8.22 g

Alcohol (g) 0.00 g

Calories From Alcohol 0.00

% Calories from Alcohol 0.00

Vitamins

Vit-A IU                                          0.00

Vit-B1 Thiamine (mg)            0.76 mg

Vit-B2 Riboflavin (mg)                 0.14 mg

Vit-B3 Niacin (mg)                  0.96 mg

Vit-B5 Pantothenic Acid (mg)    1.35 mg

Vit-B6 Pyridoxine (mg)           0.12 mg

Total Folate (mcg)                        56.00 mcg

Folate, Food (mcg)                  56.00 mcg

Folic Acid (mcg)                            0.00 mcg

Folate, DFE (mcg_DFE)          56.00 mcg_DFE

Vit-B12 Cyanocobalami (mcg)      0.00 mcg

Vit-H (mcg) Biotin*                  0.00 mcg

Vit-C (mg)                                         0.00 mg

Vit-D (IU)*                                 0.00 IU

Tocopherol, Alpha (mg)                0.00 mg

Tocopherol, Beta (mg)*           0.00 mg

Tocopherol, Gamma (mg)*            0.00 mg

Tocopherol, Delta (mg)*          0.00 mg

Vit-E (IU)*                                        0.00 IU

Vit-K (mcg)                                  63.00 mcg

Minerals

Calcium (mg)          54.00 mg

Magnesium (mg) 177.00 mg

Phosphorus (mg) 523.00 mg

Potassium (mg)     429.00 mg

Sodium (mg)         2.00 mg

Chloride (mg)*      0.00 mg

Chromium (mcg)* 0.00 mcg

Copper (mg)         0.63 mg

Fluroide (mg)*       0.00 mg

Iodine (mcg)*        0.00 mcg

Iron (mg)                4.72 mg

Manganese (mg)   4.92 mg

Molybdenum (mcg)* 0.00 mcg

Selenium (mcg)     0.00 mcg

Zinc (mg)                 3.97 mg

Carotenoids, Flavonoids, Phytonutrients

Theobromine (mg) 0.00 mg

Phytosterols (mg)* 0.00 mg

Stigmasterol (mg)* 0.00 mg

Campesterol (mg)* 0.00 mg

Beta-sitosterol (mg)* 0.00 mg

Vit-A (mcg_RAE) 0.00 mcg_RAE

Retinol (mcg) 0.00 mcg

Carotene, beta (mcg) 0.00 mcg

Carotene, alpha (mcg) 0.00 mcg

Cryptoxanthin, beta (mcg) 0.00 mcg

Lycopene (mcg) 0.00 mcg

Lutein+zeaxanthin (mcg)  0.00 mcg

Amino Acids

Histidine (g)*0.41 g

Isoleucine (g)*0.69 g

Leucine (g)*1.28 g

Lysine (g)*0.70 g

Methionine (g)*0.31 g

Phenylalanine (g)*0.90 g

Threonine (g)*0.57 g

Tryptophan (g)*0.23 g

Valine (g)*0.94 g

Alanine (g)*0.88 g

Arginine (g)*1.19 g

Aspartic acid (g)*1.45 g

Cystine (g)*0.41 g

Glutamic acid (g)*3.71 g

Glycine (g)*0.84 g

Hydroxyproline (g)*0.00 g

Proline (g)*0.93 g

Serine (g)*0.75 g

Tyrosine (g)*0.57 g

 

 

Fatty Acids

Saturated Fatty Acids

FA 4:0 (g)0.00 g

FA 6:0 (g)0.00 g

FA 8:0 (g)0.00 g

FA 10:0 (g)0.00 g

FA 12:0 (g)0.02 g

FA 13:0 (g)*0.00 g

FA 14:0 (g)0.02 g

FA 15:0 (g)*0.00 g

FA 16:0 (g)1.03 g

FA 17:0 (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:0 (g)0.07 g

FA 20:0 (g)*0.00 g

FA 22:0 (g)*0.00 g

FA 24:0 (g)*0.00 g

 

     Monounsaturated Fatty

Acids

The good fats

FA 14:1 (g)*0.00 g

FA 15:1 (g)*0.00 g

FA 16:1 undifferentiated (g)0.01 g

FA 16:1 c (g)*0.00 g

FA 16:1 t (g)*0.00 g

FA 17:1 (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:1 undifferentiated (g)2.17 g

FA 18:1 c (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:1 t (g)*0.00 g

FA 20:1 (g)0.00 g

FA 22:1 undifferentiated (g)0.00 g

FA 22:1 c (g)*0.00 g

FA 24:1 c (g)*0.00 g

 

 

       Polyunsaturated Fatty

Acids

More good fats

FA 18:2 undifferentiated (g)2.42 g

FA 18:2 n-6 c,c (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:2 i (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:2 t not further defined (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:2 CLAs (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:3 undifferentiated (g)0.11 g

FA 18:3 n-3 c,c,c (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:3 n-6 c,c,c (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:3 i (g)*0.00 g

FA 18:4 (g)0.00 g

FA 20:2 n-6 c,c (g)*0.00 g

FA 20:3 undifferentiated (g)*0.00 g

FA 20:4 undifferentiated (g)0.00 g

FA 20:5 n-3 (g)0.00 g

FA 22:5 n-3 (g)0.00 g

FA 22:6 n-3 (g)0.00 g

 

 

Nutrients marked with an asterisk (*) indicate data totals with some values not available. This may result in an under reporting of values.

Food manufacturers usually do not report all food nutrient values.

These nutrient values generated from the USDA Nutrient research Database using NutriBase 7 Nutrition software

Copyright © 2007, by NutriCoach. All rights Reserved.

references

  •     * Anderson JW. Whole grains and coronary heart disease: the whole kernel of truth. Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Dec;80(6):1459-60., PMID: 15585755
  •     * Bazzano LA, He J, Ogden LG, Loria CM, Whelton PK. Dietary fiber intake and reduced risk of coronary heart disease in US men and women: the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey I Epidemiologic Follow-up Study. Arch Intern Med. 2003 Sep 8;163(16):1897-904
  •     * Chen CY, Milbury PE, Kwak HK, Collins FW, Samuel P, Blumberg JB. Avenanthramides phenolic acids from oats are bioavailable and act synergistically with vitamin C to enhance hamster and human LDL resistance to oxidation. J Nutr. 2004 Jun;134(6):1459-66., PMID: 15186945
  •     * Delaney B, Nicolosi RJ, Wilson TA et al. Beta-glucan fractions from barley and oats are similarly antiatherogenic in hypercholesterolemic Syrian golden hamsters. J Nutr; 2003 Feb 133(2):468-75 2003
  •     * Ensminger AH, Ensminger, ME, Kondale JE, Robson JRK. Foods & Nutriton Encyclopedia. Pegus Press, Clovis, California 1983
  •     * Ensminger AH, Esminger M. K. J. e. al. Food for Health: A Nutrition Encyclopedia. Clovis, California: Pegus Press; 1986, PMID: 15210
  •     * Erkkila AT, Herrington DM, Mozaffarian D, Lichtenstein AH. Cereal fiber and whole-grain intake are associated with reduced progression of coronary-artery atherosclerosis in postmenopausal women with coronary artery disease. Am Heart J. 2005 Jul;150(1):94-101., PMID: 16084154
  •     * Fortin, Francois, Editorial Director. The Visual Foods Encyclopedia. Macmillan, New York 1996
  •     * Hogberg L, Laurin P, Falth-Magnusson K, Grant C, Grodzinsky E, Jansson G, Ascher H, Browaldh L, Hammersjo JA, Lindberg E, Myrdal U, Stenhammar L. Oats to children with newly diagnosed coeliac disease: a randomised double blind study. Gut. 2004 May;53(5):649-654., PMID: 15059781
  •     * Jensen MK, Koh-Banerjee P, Hu FB, Franz M, Sampson L, Gronbaek M, Rimm EB. Intakes of whole grains, bran, and germ and the risk of coronary heart disease in men. Am J Clin Nutr 2004 Dec;80(6):1492-9., PMID: 15585760
  •     * Johnsen NF, Hausner H, Olsen A, Tetens I, Christensen J, Knudsen KE, Overvad K, Tjonneland A. Intake of whole grains and vegetables determines the plasma enterolactone concentration of Danish women. J Nutr. 2004 Oct;134(10):2691-7., PMID: 15465768
  •     * Liu L, Zubik L, Collins FW, Marko M, Meydani M. The antiatherogenic potential of oat phenolic compounds. Atherosclerosis. 2004 Jul;175(1):39-49., PMID: 15186945
  •     * Liu RH. New finding may be key to ending confusion over link between fiber, colon cancer. American Institute for Cancer Research Press Release, November 3, 2004.
  •     * Tabak C, Wijga AH, de Meer G, Janssen NA, Brunekreef B, Smit HA. Diet and asthma in Dutch school children (ISAAC-2). Thorax. 2006 Dec;61(12):1048-53. Epub 2005 Oct 21. , PMID: 16244092
  •     * Tsikitis VL, Albina JE, Reichner JS. Beta-glucan affects leukocyte navigation in a complex chemotactic gradient. Surgery. 2004 Aug;136(2):384-9., PMID: 15300205
  •     * van Dam RM, Hu FB, Rosenberg L, Krishnan S, Palmer JR. Dietary calcium and magnesium, major food sources, and risk of type 2 diabetes in U.S. Black women. Diabetes Care. 2006 Oct;29(10):2238-43. , PMID: 17003299
  •     * Wood, Rebecca. The Whole Foods Encyclopedia. New York, NY: Prentice-Hall Press; 1988, PMID: 15220

 

Last Updated ( Friday, 16 February 2007 )
 

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