Posted on 06/20/2025 10:47:08 AM PDT by Red Badger
A new study reveals that eating one avocado per day may enhance sleep, highlighting an unexpected connection between nutrition and sleep quality. The findings build on growing evidence linking avocados to heart health and suggest intriguing potential for dietary choices to influence sleep-related health factors. Credit: Shutterstock Daily avocado intake was linked to better sleep and heart health, likely due to key nutrients, according to a new analysis of a major dietary study.
A new study suggests that eating one avocado per day may help improve sleep. Research now confirms that sleep is just as important for overall health as nutrition and exercise. In a secondary analysis of the largest randomized controlled trial on avocados to date, researchers found that adults who ate one avocado each day for six months reported better sleep than those who consumed fewer than two avocados per month.
According to the CDC, getting enough sleep can reduce risk factors for heart disease. These results add to the growing evidence that supports avocados as a heart-healthy food and represent the first time a link has been found between avocado consumption and sleep. The American Heart Association (AHA) includes healthy sleep duration as one of eight essential health factors that, when optimized, can help promote ideal cardiovascular health.
Research insights from Penn State
“Sleep is emerging as a key lifestyle factor in heart health, and this study invites us to consider how nutrition—and foods like avocado—can play a role in improving it,” said Dr. Kristina Petersen, study author and associate professor of nutritional sciences at Penn State University. “Cardiovascular health is influenced by many factors, and while no single food is a silver bullet, some—like avocados—offer a range of nutrients that support multiple aspects of heart health. This is an encouraging step in expanding the science around avocados and the potential benefits of consumption.”
With support from the Avocado Nutrition Center, the study included 969 racially and ethnically diverse American adults who had elevated waist circumference, a cardiovascular risk factor that affects nearly 60% of adults in the United States. Participants were randomly assigned to either eat one avocado per day or to consume very few avocados (fewer than two per month) while maintaining their usual diet over a six-month period.
Measuring heart health outcomes
Cardiovascular health was assessed using the AHA’s Life’s Essential 8, a framework used by healthcare professionals as well as individuals to better understand and reduce risk factors. This tool identifies diet quality, physical activity, nicotine exposure, sleep, body weight, blood pressure, blood lipids, and blood glucose as leading behaviors and factors that when improved, can lead to better health outcomes.
Daily avocado intake was associated with improved diet quality (measured by the Healthy Eating Index 2015), blood lipids (modest reductions in LDL-C and total cholesterol levels), and sleep health (increased self-reported sleep duration). No significant effects were found for the other Life’s Essential 8 components.
New research suggests that eating one avocado a day may positively impact sleep. Credit: Avocados – Love One Today Though the study was not originally designed to examine sleep as a primary outcome, the results offer an exciting direction for future research with more rigorous methodology and tools to better understand the potential for how the nutrients in avocados may support aspects of cardiovascular health. There are several strengths to this study design, but the findings are not conclusive and cannot be generalized to all populations.
Avocados have the following nutrients per serving (1/3 medium avocado) that may play a role in sleep:
Tryptophan: 13 mg, a precursor to melatonin, which helps regulate sleep
Folate: 45 mcg (10% DV), supports the production of melatonin
Magnesium: 15 mg (4% DV), plays a role in muscle contraction and relaxation
Additionally, the combination of fiber and monounsaturated fats in avocados contributes to their beneficial impact on cardiovascular health.
Fiber: 3 g (11% DV), with one-third as soluble fiber, which helps block cholesterol absorption in the digestive tract and lowers the risk of heart disease
Monounsaturated fat: 5 g, which may help lower LDL cholesterol levels and reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke
Reference:
“Effect of Daily Avocado Intake on Cardiovascular Health Assessed by Life’s Essential 8: An Ancillary Study of HAT, a Randomized Controlled Trial”
by Janhavi J. Damani, Penny M. Kris‐Etherton, Alice H. Lichtenstein, Nirupa R. Matthan, Joan Sabaté, Zhaoping Li, David Reboussin and Kristina S. Petersen, 19 February 2025, Journal of the American Heart Association.
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.124.039130
The study was funded by the Avocado Nutrition Center.
The authors thank the Avocado Nutrition Center for providing avocados at the 4 clinical centers, Pennsylvania State University, Loma Linda University, Tufts University, and University of California at Los Angeles. The authors also thank the study staff at the central coordinating center, Wake Forest University, and all clinical centers for their assistance with HAT management and data collection.
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Thank you very much and God bless you.
Makes great library paste, too.
Study sponsored by an avocado trade group.
Who would know this better than the Hass Avocado Board?
I prefer sex myself.
I Hass no idea.....................
That’s it, the science is settled. Guacamole is health food and if anyone tries to tell me any different I’m just going to call it “misinformation.” I’d better swing by my favorite Mexican restaurant tonight and order some medicine.
As long as it’s not with an avocado.
They are nasty. I could use a sleep aid but not that bad.
With a nice margarita. Rocks, with salt.
They sure aren’t helping Chunky Schumer any. BTW: Has anyone seen Schumer waving a Mexican flag and a bottle of Corona in downtown LA lately.
I remember as a kid in the mid-60s being completely grossed out by these slimy green chunks in a salad. Now I really like avocados, and I would eat them every day if I could afford it. Nothing like a perfectly ripe avocado with just a sprinkle of salt.
He's busy getting the grill fired up for 4th of July!.................
IIRC an old study from several years ago, avocados is one of the few sole survival food sources.
Yes, they are full of all the good nutrients that are necessary for life!............
“I prefer sex myself.”
Avocados don’t have sex, they grow on trees you sicko.
I can Hass ... avocado?
(Man, I'm getting old!)
I survived a whole year on open face tuna melts on an english muffin topped with avocado!
Good! lots of protein!.................
I thought he renamed it the Umpteenth Of July.
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