A recent study has found that the instant noodles
commonly known as ramen may increase people’s risk of metabolic changes linked
to heart disease and stroke.
In the study, according to Fox News, instant noodles
are high in fat, high in salt, high in calories and they’re processed; all
those factors could contribute to some health problems.
Fox News also said that, “women in South Korea who consumed more of
the pre-cooked blocks of dried noodles were more likely to have metabolic
syndrome regardless of what else they ate, or how much they exercised.
”The research study published in the Journal of
Nutrition emphasised that people who had metabolic syndrome could have high
blood pressure or high blood sugar levels, with the consequence being the risk
of heart disease, stroke and diabetes. Hyun Shin, co-author of the study,
and a doctoral candidate at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, said although
instant noodle is a convenient and delicious food, there could be an increased
risk for metabolic syndrome given the high sodium, unhealthy saturated fat and
glycemic loads in the food.
To arrive at this conclusion, Shin and his team at Baylor University
and Harvard studied and investigated the health and diet of at least 11,000
adults in South Korea
between ages 19 to 64 looking at how many times they ate instant noodles every
week.
The researchers found that women who ate instant
noodles twice or more every week had a higher risk of developing metabolic
syndrome than those who ate less.
However, the researchers said they could not link any
association between eating noodles such number of times and developing
metabolic syndrome in men, arguing that this may be linked to the difference in
gender of men and women including the effect of sex hormones and metabolism.
The researchers said they picked population in South Korea
because the country is the highest consumer of noodles in the world with a
consumption rate of 3.4 billion packages of instant noodles in 2010.Lisa
Young, a Professor and nutritionist at the New York
University, while speaking about the study, said it could apply to every part
of the world where noodles (ramen) are sold and eaten “Instant noodles are high
in fat, high in salt, high in calories and they’re processed; all those factors
could contribute to some of the health problems addressed. “That doesn’t mean
that every single person is going to respond the same way, but the piece to
keep in mind is that it’s not a healthy product, and it is a processed food,”
Fox News quoted Young as saying, adding that processed
foods are known to contain high amounts of sugar and salt since they are
designed to have long shelf lives. Young added that to eat instant noodles and
avoid the dangers in it, “number one, don’t eat it every day; number two,
portion control (in which one should eat small amount of instant noodles and
mix them with vegetables and other healthier, non-processed foods).”
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