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Title
Not So Soy Healthy For The Heart
By Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN
Soy does not lower cholesterol, does not prevent heart disease and does
not deserve an FDA-approved soy heart health claim. This amazing announcement
comes from none other than the American Heart Association (AHA) published
in the January 17, 2006 issue of its journal Circulation.
Athletes At Risk
Not long before, University of Colorado researchers reported in the
January issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation that soy worsens
cardiomyopathy, a form of heart disease that is very much on the rise,
afflicting one in 500 Americans. Cardiomyopathy, defined as a weakening
of the heart muscle or change in structure of the heart, is the leading
cause of death among young athletes, a group that may consume a lot
of soy in the form of protein powders and energy bars.
Women At Risk
Now investigators have found more damning evidence against soy. High
levels of soy isoflavones—plant estrogens found in products like
soy milk and soy nuts as well as many menopausal supplements—put
women at risk for cardiovascular disease. The study—reported in
the May, 2007 issue of Journal of Women’s Health—began when
Carl J. Pepine, MD, chief of cardiology at the University of Florida
College of Medicine in Gainesville, along with ten other researchers
from his own and five other medical institutions, aimed to find out
whether women who have high concentrations of isoflavones in their blood
had better vascular health. Subjects were participants in the Women’s
Ischemia Syndrome Evaluation (WISE) who had reported chest pain and
were thus suspected to suffer from myocardial ischemia (defined as pathological
loss of or reduction in blood flow—ischemia—to a part of
the muscular tissue of the heart—myocardium).
More than 900 women have participated in the WISE project, which was
founded a decade ago by the National Institutes of Health to study whether
heart disease develops differently in women than in men. Because heart
disease is more likely to occur after menopause, scientists have blamed
waning estrogen levels. Dr. Pepine and his colleagues had expected that
women with high levels of genistein (the primary isoflavone found in
soybeans) would show improved vascular health, but found the opposite
to be true. Speaking to a reporter for Science News, Dr. Pepine said:
“There are a lot of women taking these things (isoflavone-rich
products), without any direct evidence that they’re beneficial.”
He warned that there is a “small but growing body of research
suggesting there could be a down side to overindulging in them.”
Industry Response
Industry response to mounting evidence for soy’s lack of benefit
has been entirely predictable: endless references to soy being both
low in saturated fat and free of cholesterol (twin evils that “everyone
knows” cause heart disease) combined with chipper reports of hot,
new evidence “proving” that soy is the best thing for the
heart since love. Although some of this hype has made it into the news—particularly
in magazines where soy foods and soy milk are heavily advertised—a
shift has definitely taken place. Health magazines are increasingly
leaving soy off lists of healthy foods. These days they aren’t
yet reporting risks from soy, but they aren’t singing its praises
either.
Soy Book Ban
The July/August issue of Energy Times featured an “Omnivore versus
Vegan” debate designed to help readers decide whether Mother Nature
designed us as to eat animal products or whether we should consider
veganism “our next big evolutionary leap.” Speaking for
the vegans was Hope Ferdowsian, MD, of the Physicians Committee for
Responsible Medicine. Representing the omnivores was WAPF board member
Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, who was invited to participate only on the grounds
that she not speak out about soy. Apparently the advertisers were so
nervous about the subject that they didn’t even permit her to
be credited as author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s
Favorite Health Food. Whereas health magazines have often chosen to
eliminate the book’s informative subtitle, Energy Times excised
all mention of the book. In addition to the usual array of soy advertisements,
the back inside cover of the magazine featured an advertisement in the
guise of a footnoted article. Its title? “The Good News About
Soy Continues.” Among other claims: soy is very heart healthy.
About the Author
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