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May 28 (Reuters) – Soy-rich diets have been linked to lower

rates of heart disease, but soy supplements alone may not do

anything for older women’s blood pressure, according to a U.S.

study.

The findings, reported in the American Journal of Clinical

Nutrition, add to the mixed evidence on the health benefits of

soy isoflavones – compounds that are thought to have weak

estrogen-like effects in some body tissue.

Researchers have long known that Asian populations with

soy-rich diets have lower rates of heart disease compared with

people who eat “Western” diets, but it has not been clear

whether soy isoflavone supplements have cardiovascular benefits,

such as cutting blood pressure or cholesterol levels.

A number of studies have found that intravenous infusions of

soy isoflavones may boost the body’s production of nitric oxide

and help blood vessels dilate.

“But we don’t take soy by infusion,” said William Wong, a

nutrition researcher at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston,

who led the study.

On top of that, he told Reuters Health, those studies looked

at short-term effects on blood vessel function, and not whether

there are “sustained” benefits for blood pressure.

So for their study, Wong and his colleagues randomly

assigned 24 menopausal women to take either soy isoflavones or

placebo tablets for six weeks. The supplement gave a daily dose

of 80 milligrams of isoflavones.

All of the women started the study with moderately elevated

blood pressure. After six weeks, Wong’s team found that women on

the soy supplement were faring no better than those on the

placebo.

On average, systolic blood pressure was 136 mm/Hg in the

placebo group, and 137 mm/Hg in the soy group. Systolic blood

pressure is the first number in a blood-pressure reading, and

levels of 140 mm/Hg or above are considered high.

As for diastolic blood pressure, the average in both groups

landed at about 80 mm/Hg, or the upper threshold of “normal.”

Wong’s team also did special blood tests to see whether the

soy supplement affected the women’s production of nitric oxide,

a chemical that dilates blood vessels. They found no effect.

“It was disappointing,” Wong said.

While the study only lasted for six weeks, Wong said that

the time period should have been long enough to detect blood

pressure benefits if there were any.

“If we didn’t see anything in six weeks, we doubt there

would be effects (longer term),” he said.

He said that the health benefits linked to soy in Asian

populations may be the result of a lifetime of eating those

foods and taking supplements later in life may simply not have

enough of an impact.

“I think that if people are looking for a magic bullet

against high blood pressure, this is not it,” he added.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/Ku3fIt

(Reporting from New York by Amy Norton at Reuters Health;

Editing by Elaine Lies and Michael Perry)