Each additional 7 grams of dietary fibre per day is associated with a 9% reduction in cardiovascular disease risk, operating through LDL cholesterol reduction, blood pressure lowering, and gut microbiome modulation.
Higher dietary fibre intake is robustly associated with lower cardiovascular disease risk. A 2013 meta-analysis found that each 7g/day increase in total fibre was associated with a 9% reduction in cardiovascular disease risk. The mechanisms include LDL cholesterol reduction by soluble fibre, blood pressure lowering, reduced postprandial glucose spikes, and production of cardioprotective short-chain fatty acids by gut bacteria.
A landmark 2013 meta-analysis by Threapleton et al. in the BMJ, pooling 22 prospective studies, found that each 7g/day increment in total dietary fibre was associated with a 9% lower risk of cardiovascular disease. A 2019 systematic review and meta-analysis by Reynolds et al. in The Lancet, commissioned by the WHO, found that people consuming the most dietary fibre (25–29g/day) had a 15–30% lower risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and colorectal cancer compared to those consuming the least. Soluble fibre specifically reduces LDL cholesterol by binding bile acids in the gut, forcing the liver to use circulating cholesterol to produce more bile — a mechanism confirmed by Brown et al. (1999) in a meta-analysis of 67 controlled trials.
"Each 7g/day increment in total dietary fibre was associated with a 9% lower risk of cardiovascular disease."
— Threapleton et al., BMJ 2013
MedlinePlus and the NIH recommend 25–38 grams of dietary fibre per day for adults (25g for women, 38g for men), noting that most Americans consume only 10–15g per day — well below the recommended amount. The NIA notes that fibre-rich foods including fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes are cornerstone components of a healthy diet for older adults. The NHS recommends 30g of fibre per day for adults in the UK.
Increasing fibre intake from 15g to 25g per day is achievable through straightforward dietary changes: replacing refined grains with whole grains, adding a daily serving of legumes (lentils, chickpeas, beans), and including vegetables at every meal. Soluble fibre sources (oats, psyllium, apples, legumes) are most effective for LDL reduction. Insoluble fibre (wheat bran, vegetables) is most important for gut transit and colorectal cancer prevention. Increasing fibre intake should be gradual to avoid bloating — add 5g per week over 4–6 weeks.
Vitaei verdict
Dietary fibre is one of the most evidence-supported dietary components for cardiovascular health. The dose-response relationship is clear and the mechanisms are well characterised.
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