Australian researchers have found that eating a block of dark chocolate daily over 10 years has “significant” benefits for high-risk cardiac patients and could prevent heart attacks and strokes.

We’re not suggesting that the high-risk group use dark chocolate as their only preventative measure but in combination with sensible choices, such as exercise

A study of 2,013 Australians conducted at Melbourne’s Monash University found that the consumption of 100 grams of chocolate with a 70 per cent or higher cocoa content every day was an effective measure to reduce risk.

Lead researcher Ella Zomer said the team found 70 fatal and 15 non-fatal cardiovascular events per 10,000 people could be prevented over 10 years if patients at risk of having a heart attack or stroke ate dark chocolate.

“We’ve predicted significant health benefits of eating 100 grams of dark chocolate every day over a 10-year period,” Ms Zomer said of the study, published in the British Medical Journal.

“Our findings indicate dark chocolate therapy could provide an alternative to or be used to complement drug therapeutics in people at high risk of cardiovascular disease.”

Ms Zomer’s research partner Chris Reid said measurements from the subjects, all of whom had classic risk factors such as high blood pressure and elevated cholesterol or body weight, were run through epidemio­logical modelling.

The projections of likely deaths and other non-fatal events between those who consumed dark chocolate and those who did not were compared and there was a notable difference.

“One of the appeals of this study is here is a dietary alternative which may be quite appealing to a lot of people. In fact, chocolate studies have shown really good compliance rates,” Mr Reid said.

High-cocoa chocolate is beneficial because it contains antioxidant chemicals called polyphenols which help keep blood vessels dilated, thereby reducing blood pressure and improving blood flow.

Green tea and brightly coloured fruits such as red apples and blueberries are also major sources of polyphenols.

Experts have cautioned that excessive consumption of dark chocolate leads to obesity, itself a leading cause of cardiovascular disease. But Mr Reid said: “We’re not suggesting that the high-risk group use dark chocolate as their only preventative measure but in combination with sensible choices, such as exercise.”

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death worldwide.

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