CHICAGO - Here's some good and bad news for chocoholics: Dark chocolate seems 
to lower blood pressure, but it requires an amount less than two Hershey's 
Kisses to do it, a small study suggests. The new research from Germany adds to 
mounting evidence linking dark chocolate with health benefits, but it's the 
first to suggest that just a tiny amount may suffice. 
 
 
   Chocolate truffels for sale. Eating a little bit of dark 
 chocolate every day can reduce blood pressure without causing weight gain 
 or other side effects, according to a study published Tuesday in the 
 United States. [Agencies]
   | 
Volunteers for the study ate just over 6 grams of dark chocolate daily for 
almost five months - one square from a German chocolate bar called Ritter Sport, 
equal to about 1 1/2 Hershey's Kisses. People who ate that amount ended up with 
lower blood pressure readings than those who ate white chocolate. 
University of Cologne researcher Dr. Dirk Taubert, the study's lead author, 
said the blood pressure reductions with dark chocolate were small but still 
substantial enough to potentially reduce cardiovascular disease risks, although 
study volunteers weren't followed long enough to measure that effect. 
The research involved just 44 people aged 56 through 73, but the results echo 
other small studies of cocoa-containing foods. Cocoa contains flavanols, 
plant-based compounds that also are credited with giving red wine its 
heart-healthy benefits. 
One problem is chocolate bars containing cocoa tend to have lots of calories, 
so Taubert and his colleagues tested small amounts containing just 30 calories 
each. 
The study appears in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association. 
It was funded by University Hospital in Cologne. 
The results are interesting but need to be duplicated in larger, more 
ethnically diverse populations, said Dr. Laura Svetkey, director of Duke 
University's Hypertension Center. 
She stressed that the study results should not be viewed as license to gorge 
on chocolate. 
"I would be as happy as the next person if I got to eat more chocolate," she 
said, but cautioned that weight gain from eating large amounts of dark chocolate 
would counteract any benefits on blood pressure. 
Study participants were otherwise healthy and mostly normal-weight German 
adults with mild high blood pressure or pre-hypertension, which includes 
readings between 120 over 80 and 139 over 89. 
Average blood pressure at the start was about 147 over 86. 
Every day for 18 weeks, the volunteers were instructed to eat one-square 
portions of a 16-square Ritter Sport bar, or a similar portion of white 
chocolate. White chocolate doesn't contain cocoa. 
Systolic blood pressure, the top number, fell an average of nearly three 
points and diastolic dropped almost two points in the dark chocolate group, 
compared with no change in blood pressure readings in the white chocolate group. 
Tests suggested that steady exposure to dark chocolate prompted chemical 
changes that helped dilate blood vessels and regulate blood pressure, the 
researchers said. 
Participants were told not to eat other cocoa-containing products and to 
continue regular eating habits and activity levels. They also kept food diaries 
so researchers could see if other foods might have influenced the results. 
But, said Taubert, "It is very unlikely that other factors may explain the 
blood pressure reduction." 
Dr. Lawrence Appel of Johns Hopkins School of Medicine said the most proven 
non-drug methods for lowering blood pressure are losing weight and eating less 
salt. Eating dark chocolate might help if combined with those two, he said. 
For most people, "the lower your blood pressure, the better you are. So if 
you can get it lower from different strategies that's good for the long term," 
Appel said.