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 The news the world has awaited with bated breath is finally here: Cocoa  		prevents cancer and heart disease. Candy producer Mars Inc., along with  		Harvard University, released the results of a 10-year study on Feb. 9  		revealing that cocoa – rather, the flavanols in cocoa – can  		substantially reduce the risk of heart disease and cancer.     The study compared the death certificates of 1,250 Kuna Indians in  		Panama and in the San Blas Islands just off Panama's coast. The Panama  		Kunas did not consume cocoa regularly, while the San Blas Kunas drank  		four to five cups of cocoa water per day. The study revealed that the  		San Blas Kunas, who drank the cocoa water, had a 1,280 percent lower  		risk of death from heart disease than the Panama Kunas, and a 630  		percent lower risk of death from cancer.     In the United States, where heart disease and cancer are the top two  		causes of death, according to the Centers for Disease Control and  		Prevention, this is fantastic news. Cocoa, which chocolate is made from,  		can significantly help in the prevention of cancer and heart disease. 		    But don't leap to the wrong conclusions and think that chocolate candy  		is good medicine. Most chocolate in the United States packs a sizeable  		dose of sugar and milk fat to make it sweet and delicious, and thereby  		desired by most consumers. Eating milk chocolate bars, for example, will  		not help you prevent cancer or heart disease nearly as well as eating  		darker chocolate, because adding dairy products to chocolate effectively  		cancels out the healthy antioxidants in the cocoa itself. It may taste  		good, but it's largely useless as far as preventing cancer and heart  		disease. In fact, even eating some popular brands of dark chocolate will  		not help you prevent these diseases, since they, too, are often loaded  		with sugar and milk fats.    A good rule of thumb is to consume chocolate containing a minimum of 70  		percent pure cocoa. Avoid added sugars, artificial sweeteners and milk  		fat to truly gain the natural anti-cancer benefits of cocoa. The best  		form in which you can consume cocoa is its most pure form: Raw cacao.  		Cacao is the actual bean that cocoa comes from, and it is one of the  		richest food sources of flavanols available. It's completely raw, so it  		hasn't been processed, and it lacks the sugars, food additives and milk  		fats that are so common in processed chocolate. In addition, the  		flavanols in raw cacao are highly absorbable by the body, since there is  		no sugar or milk fat interfering with their benefits.     Just remember the details of the Mars study: The Kuna Indians of the San  		Blas islands experienced their amazing health benefits from drinking a  		cocoa-water beverage. They weren't eating milk chocolate bars or  		sugar-laden dark chocolate. They certainly weren't eating white  		chocolate, which contains no cocoa and therefore doesn't help prevent  		cancer or heart disease in the least. They were consuming a bitter,  		natural source of cocoa.     We've seen now that pure cocoa or cacao does indeed prevent cancer and  		heart disease. The study results are in, and they strongly indicate the  		healthy benefits of cocoa. However, consumers may misinterpret this news  		in two ways. First, they may go out and eat as much sweet, sugary, fatty  		milk chocolate as they want, and be surprised when their eventual  		obesity actually leads them to have an increased risk of cancer and  		heart disease. Secondly, they may think that cocoa -- even in its  		truest, purest form -- is the only food available that offers these  		benefits.     In addition to dark chocolate and cacao, a wide variety of foods and  		beverages contain flavanols: Green and black tea, acai, pomegranate,  		cherries, apples, apricots, blackberries and raspberries, purple grapes,  		kale and many others. While consuming cacao or high-cocoa dark chocolate  		on a regular basis will indeed help you significantly reduce the risk of  		cancer and heart disease, remember that it is not your only option.  		However, for cocoa lovers around the world, the word is out: Your  		favorite food has finally been proven to help prevent cancer and heart  		disease, the top two causes of death in the United States. 
Source   newstarget.com 
				
                
                
	
  	 
     
     
	
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