Toss a third of an avocado into your morning smoothie for extra creaminess and longevity-supporting nutrients.
Image Credit: Oscar Wong/Moment/GettyImages They say an apple a day keeps the doctor away, but what about an avocado? Turns out, incorporating this fantastic fruit (yes, avocado is technically a fruit) into your daily diet can support your health today, tomorrow and in the long term.
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Here, Phyllis Famularo, DCN, RD, CSG, a dietitian with a specialty in gerontology, explains why eating avocado is amazing for longevity (good news for you guac lovers!).
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Benefits of Avocado for Longevity
It’s Good for Your Heart Avocados are terrific for your ticker: That’s because they’re heaping with heart-protective monounsaturated fats.
Advertisement “Research indicates that individuals who consume avocados (as well as a diet high in other fruits and vegetables) have healthier lipid profiles, including higher HDL, which is the good cholesterol,” Famularo says. Indeed, a small study found that swapping avocado oil for butter improved total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol (“bad cholesterol”), triglycerides levels and insulin, per a June 2019 review in Molecules.
Advertisement And a healthy heart helps your odds of enjoying a longer life.
It Supports Brain Function For a sharper mind, add an avocado to your plate. The fruit’s heart-protective properties play a role in brain health, too. Here’s why: “Many dementias are vascular in nature,” meaning that they’re related to a problem with your blood vessels, Famularo says.
Advertisement Think of it like this: When your blood vessels are working at their best, they can supply your brain with the oxygen and nutrients it needs to perform at its peak. So, foods like avocado — which promote heart health and healthy blood flow — can also aid in brain function, she says. Plus, avocados are ample in antioxidants, including a carotenoid (or pigment) called lutein, Famularo says.
Advertisement In fact, an August 2017 study in Nutrients found that eating avocado increased lutein levels in the brain and improved cognition (including working memory and problem-solving skills) in older adults.
Advertisement 3. It Promotes Healthy Eyes “Because avocados contain antioxidants like carotenoids [such as lutein], they can be beneficial to eye health,” Famularo says.
Advertisement Case in point: The same August 2017 study in Nutrients observed a 25 percent increase in lutein levels in the eyes of older adults who ate an avocado daily for six months. Avocados are also abundant in antioxidants like vitamins C and E, which both boast protective properties for your peepers, Famularo says. Safeguarding your eye health is fundamental at every stage of life, but it’s especially important as you grow older as advanced age is associated with a higher risk for certain eye diseases, according to the American Academy of Ophthalmology (AAO).
Advertisement Related Reading How Vision Changes as You Age, and 5 Tips to Support Your Eye Health
It's Linked to Helping Manage Diabetes
When left unchecked or unmanaged, diabetes can cause some serious, potentially life-threatening medical issues, so it’s important to do whatever you can to control the disease for a longer, healthier life. And eating avocado as part of an overall healthy diet can be one of the many strategies you take to do just that. For one, these fruits have few carbs and are low on the glycemic index, Famularo says. This is important for folks who must watch their sugar and carb intake, she explains.
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The healthy fat content in avocados also supplies satiating calories that may help curb carb consumption as well, Famularo says. And to top it off, the dietary fiber in these fantastic fruits is beneficial for diabetes control, too, she adds.
Not to mention, avocados are full of free-radical fighting antioxidants, which aid in inhibiting the inflammation that contributes to chronic diseases such as diabetes. So, How Much Avocado Should You Eat Per Day? Famularo recommends enjoying 1/3 to 1/2 of a whole avocado each day. Even better if you substitute it in place of butter and other saturated fats, she says. A 1/3 of an avocado will give you 106 calories, 9.7 grams of fat and 4.4 grams of fiber while a 1/2 avocado has 161 calories, 14.7 grams of fat and 6.7 grams of fiber, per the USDA. Try These Avocado Recipes 7 Tasty Ways to Eat Avocados That Aren’t Toast or Guacamole 10 Effortless Ways to Dress Up Your Avocado Toast
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references
Nutrients: “Avocado Consumption Increases Macular Pigment Density in Older Adults: A Randomized, Controlled Trial”
American Academy of Ophthalmology: “20 Ways Aging Changes Your Eyes”
references
Nutrients: “Avocado Consumption Increases Macular Pigment Density in Older Adults: A Randomized, Controlled Trial”
American Academy of Ophthalmology: “20 Ways Aging Changes Your Eyes”
Toss a third of an avocado into your morning smoothie for extra creaminess and longevity-supporting nutrients.
Image Credit: Oscar Wong/Moment/GettyImages
Image Credit: Oscar Wong/Moment/GettyImages
The One Cooking Oil Longevity Experts Want You to Use More Often
How Vision Changes as You Age, and 5 Tips to Support Your Eye Health
7 Tasty Ways to Eat Avocados That Aren’t Toast or Guacamole 10 Effortless Ways to Dress Up Your Avocado Toast
Nutrients: “Avocado Consumption Increases Macular Pigment Density in Older Adults: A Randomized, Controlled Trial”
American Academy of Ophthalmology: “20 Ways Aging Changes Your Eyes”