High Blood Sugar? Maybe Try Some Cheddar to Lower It

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By Hristina Byrnes Updated Published
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High Blood Sugar? Maybe Try Some Cheddar to Lower It

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Medical science has long seen cheese as both good and bad. On the plus side, cheese has undeniable health benefits: It’s a good source of protein, and, depending on the type of milk used and the cheesemaking process, it can help supply such essential nutrients as calcium, zinc, phosphorus, and vitamins A, B2, and B12.

On the other hand, cheese is high in calories, and in sodium and saturated fat, which can lead to an increased risk of high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes. At least that’s the conventional scientific wisdom. And these are just a few dangerous things experts links to heart disease.

However, there is increasing evidence that people who eat a lot of cheese do not, in fact, have a higher risk of these conditions. And full-fat cheese doesn’t seem to be any worse for us than the reduced-fat variety.

Observational studies that analyze the eating habits of large groups and correlate their consumption of cheese and other dairy products with their development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), have previously found that cheese has either a neutral or beneficial effect on several CVD risk factors. Such studies are considered useful, but don’t establish a cause-and-effect relationship between cheese and these diseases.

A new study by researchers at the University of Alberta in Canada, however, takes the concept further. Studying the effects of a diet high in both reduced-fat and regular cheddar (which happens to be one of America’s favorite cheeses) on laboratory rats, they found that insulin resistance — a condition that leads to risk factors for both CVD and type 2 diabetes — was reduced in the cheese-eating animals, regardless of the fat content of the cheese. (This is perhaps good news to the organization that funded the study, the Dairy Farmers of Canada.)

“[E]ating cheese doesn’t make things worse and may in fact make things better in terms of cardiovascular disease or diabetes risk,” university nutrition expert Catherine Chan told MedicalXpress. “The cheese didn’t totally normalize the effects of insulin, but it significantly improved them.”

Perhaps it’s not coincidental that America’s leading cheese-producing state, Wisconsin, is also one of the states with the least heart disease.

Photo of Hristina Byrnes
About the Author Hristina Byrnes →

Hristina Byrnes is the editor of 247Tempo.com, where she handles the site's assignments and editing. She holds a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University, which she earned in 2012, and she specializes in translating complex health data research into engaging, accessible stories for a general audience.

When she's not poring over the latest data sets or brainstorming story ideas, you can find Hristina watching tennis, playing tennis with her son, or trying to get her daughter into tennis.

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