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Media Room -
News Release
CONTACT:
Andrew Shea
The Solae Company
314/982-1314
ashea@solae.com
January 25, 2006
STATEMENT OF FACTS CONCERNING SOY PROTEIN AND CHOLESTEROL
A recent report of the Nutrition Committee of the American Heart
Association (AHA) has caused some confusion about the heart health
benefits of soy protein, and some media stories have misrepresented
the report’s findings. This statement is intended to outline
the facts concerning soy protein and heart health.
FACT: Experts Agree Soy Protein Lowers Cholesterol
The AHA research review found that soy protein lowers blood cholesterol
above and beyond that realized from a low fat, low cholesterol diet.
This finding is consistent with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) recognizing that soy protein lowers cholesterol by between
3 and 8 percent.
FACT: Experts Agree Soy Protein Has Additional Heart Health
Benefits
The AHA report noted that soy foods are heart healthy because of
their high content of polyunsaturated fats, fiber, vitamins, minerals
and low content of saturated fat, making them an ideal substitute
for less healthy foods that are high in saturated fat and cholesterol.
The FDA and, similarly, the AHA have agreed that soy foods appear
to modestly lower triglycerides and raise HDL (“Good”)
blood cholesterol levels.
FACT: Seven Governments Recognize the Heart Health Benefits
of Soy
Authorities around the world have approved health claims supporting
the consumption of soy protein and a lowering of blood cholesterol,
including the USA, Korea, Japan, Brazil, Philippines, Indonesia
and the United Kingdom. These claims were approved based on an extensive
review of scientific literature to determine that the relationship
between soy protein and lowered cholesterol was well established.
It’s the weight of this scientific evidence that led so many
government health authorities to approve soy/heart health claims.
FACT: Soy Protein is a Food, Not a Prescription Drug
Soy foods have the unique ability to both lower LDL (“Bad”)
cholesterol and lower triglycerides, but not to the degree expected
from cholesterol-lowering medications. That soy products have been
found to lower blood cholesterol even a small amount, however, has
the potential to dramatically impact public health. One may argue
whether a 3 – 8 percent reduction in cholesterol is “clinically
“significant,” but the bottom line is that heart disease
depends on small life changes. Neither pharmaceuticals nor soy foods
are by themselves panaceas for a healthy heart.
FACT: Research into Soy Protein and Heart Health Will Continue
Physicians have known for many years that lifestyle change helps
prevent heart attack and stroke. Only recently, however, have scientists
begun to study how a diet rich in soy protein helps lower cholesterol.
In 1999, The Solae Company successfully petitioned the FDA to issue
an unqualified health claim for soy protein and coronary heart disease.
Our company will continue to invest in nutrition research that helps
consumers make more informed decisions about what they eat.
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