Vegan and vegetarian diets may increase your risk of stroke, scientists warn

They’re usually seen as healthier alternatives to meat-based diets, but a new study may put you off taking up a vegan or vegetarian diet.

Researchers from the University of Oxford have revealed that while these diets reduce your risk of heart disease, they may increase your risk of stroke.

The study, published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), included data for 48,188 people with no history of heart disease or stroke.

The group was split into meat-eaters (24,428 people), fish-eaters (who consumed fish but no meat (7,506 people), and vegetarians and vegans (16,254 people).

Over a follow-up of 18 years, 2,820 cases of ischaemic heart disease and 1,072 cases of stroke were recorded among the overall group.

After adjusting for factors that might influence the results, researchers found that fish eaters had a 13% reduced risk of heart disease than meat eaters, while vegetarians and vegans had a 22% lower risk.

This was equivalent to 10 fewer cases of ischaemic heart disease in vegetarians and vegans than in meat eaters per 1,000 people over 10 years.

The researchers said: "We observed lower rates of ischaemic heart disease in fish eaters and vegetarians than in meat eaters, which appears to be at least partly due to lower body mass index and lower rates of high blood pressure , high blood cholesterol, diabetes associated with these diets."

But the study found 20% higher rates of stroke in vegetarians and vegans than in meat eaters, equivalent to three more cases of stroke per 1,000 people over 10 years.

This was mostly due to a higher rate of haemorrhagic stroke – the type caused by bleeding in or around the brain.

The team said the increased risk of stroke could be down to lower levels of vitamins among the vegetarians and vegans in the study.

They said further investigation was needed, adding: "Vegetarians and vegans (in the study) have lower circulating levels of several nutrients (eg, vitamin B12, vitamin D, essential amino acids, and long chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids), and differences in some of these nutritional factors could contribute to the observed associations."

Researchers also suggested that low blood levels of total cholesterol among vegetarians and vegans may play a role.

They added: "Vegetarian and vegan diets have become increasingly popular in recent years, partly due to perceived health benefits, as well as concerns about the environment and animal welfare.

"In the United Kingdom, both the representative National Diet and Nutrition Survey 2008-12 and a 2016 Ipsos MORI survey estimated about 1.7 million vegetarians and vegans living in the country."


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