Effect on uric acid levels nearly matches impact
of gout medicines
DASH diet of fruits, vegetables, whole grains and low-fat
dairy
Newswise, August 17, 2016 — A diet rich in fruits, vegetables,
low-fat dairy and reduced in fats and saturated fats (the DASH diet), designed
decades ago to reduce high blood pressure, also appears to significantly lower
uric acid, the causative agent of gout.
Further, the effect was so strong in some participants that it
was nearly comparable to that achieved with drugs specifically prescribed to
treat gout, a new study led by Johns Hopkins researchers shows.
The findings--derived from a randomized clinical trial--could
offer an effective, safe and sustainable dietary approach to lower uric acid
and possibly prevent gout flare-ups in those with mild to moderate disease and
who can't or don't want to take gout drugs.
Dietary excesses, such as consuming a lot of red meat and alcohol,
have long been associated with gout, a disease marked by high levels of uric
acid in the blood and whose causes remain somewhat of an enigma despite
centuries of investigation.
The Hopkins researchers noted that while symptoms of gout
outbreaks -- severe inflammation and sharp pain in the joints, particularly the
base of the big toe -- have been linked to elevated uric acid, it's been
unclear exactly what type of diet might lower uric acid and decrease the risk
of flare-ups.
In an effort to find out, Stephen P. Juraschek, M.D., Ph.D.,
research and clinical fellow in general internal medicine at the Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine, and his colleagues used data from the DASH
(Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) clinical trial, a widely popular and
often-cited study whose results were first published in 1997.
These results showed that the DASH diet --which emphasizes
reduced salt, whole grains, fruits, vegetables, low-fat dairy products and
reduced intake of red meats, sweets and saturated fats -- had a marked positive
improvement on blood pressure and cholesterol.
In the original DASH-sodium trial, 412 participants ate either
the DASH diet or a typical American diet for three months. For each month of
the study, the participants' diets provided a different level of sodium in a
random order, including low (1.2 grams per day or about half a teaspoon),
medium (2.3 grams per day or about one teaspoon), and a high level (3.4 grams
per day or about 1.5 teaspoons).
The high sodium level was comparable to the average daily
intake in a typical American diet.
At baseline and at the end of each sodium intake period, the
researchers conducting the original study also took blood samples, which were
analyzed for a variety of blood markers, including uric acid.
In this new study, Juraschek and his colleagues examined these
data to determine whether and how each intervention affected uric acid blood
concentrations.
They found that the DASH diet led to a modest 0.35 milligrams
per deciliter decrease in uric acid concentrations overall. However, the higher
participants' baseline uric acid levels, the more dramatic the decrease.
For those with the highest baseline uric acid levels--more
than 7 milligrams per deciliter -- for example, the decrease was as high as 1.3
milligrams per deciliter.
In the context of what is known about levels of uric acid
linked to gout flare-up risk,
"That's a large reduction in uric acid," explains
Juraschek. Gout-treating medications, such as allopurinol, often reduce
patients' blood uric acid concentrations about 2 milligrams per deciliter.
"When you get as
high as the reduction we believe occurred with the original DASH diet in this
study, the effect starts being comparable with gout medications."
Juraschek noted that the effect of sodium on uric acid
concentrations was small, but significant and quite the opposite of what the
researchers expected.
Specifically, during the part of the DASH trial in which
participants were given the least sodium, their uric acid concentrations were the
highest, with slight decreases achieved during the medium and high sodium
portions of the trial.
Although high sodium levels appear to slightly decrease uric
acid concentrations, Juraschek cautions against jumping to the conclusion that
to reduce blood uric acid it's a good idea to purposely consume lots of sodium.
"More than 70 percent of people with gout have high blood
pressure," Juraschek says. "If one was to consume more sodium to
improve uric acid, it could worsen blood pressure."
The researchers caution that further research is needed to
more clearly establish the link between the DASH diet and uric acid in patients
with gout and to directly explore whether the DASH diet might reduce or prevent
gout flare-ups.
But, they conclude, the new study, described in the August 15
issue of Arthritis and Rheumatology, could offer patients a viable way to
control uric acid concentrations -- and presumably gout flare-ups -- through a
diet already shown to have positive effects on blood pressure, a well-established
risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
There are about 8.3 million people in the United States with
gout, costing the health care system an estimated $7.7 billion.
"Results of this trial are good news to patients with
high blood levels of uric acid or those at risk for gout. A dietary approach to
prevent gout should be considered first line therapy.
“This study suggests that standard dietary advice for uric
acid reduction which is to reduce alcohol and protein intake, should now
include advice to adopt the DASH diet," says senior author Edgar R. Miller III, M.D. Ph.D., professor of medicine at
the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Other researchers who participated in this study include Allan
C. Gelber, M.D., Ph.D., Lawrence J. Appel, M.D., M.P.H., and Edgar R. Miller
III, M.D. Ph.D., all from Johns Hopkins, and Hyon K. Choi, M.D., Dr.P.H., of
Harvard Medical School.
Funding for this study was provided by the National Heart Lung
and Blood Institute under grant/contract numbers U01-HL57173, U01-HL57114,
U01-HL57190, U01-HL57139, K08 HL03857-01 and U01-HL57156 and by the General
Clinical Research Program of the National Center for Research Resources under
grant/contract number M01-RR02635 and M01-RR00722. Juraschek receives support
from The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases under
grant number T32DK007732-20.
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