A Surprising Side Effect of Eating Well
Maria, 52, has watched her blood pressure and cholesterol creep up for years. Her doctor told her to eat better, but Maria also deals with constant bloating and stomach pain after meals. She assumed her gut issues were just something she had to live with.
Then she tried a Mediterranean-style diet. Within weeks, her stomach felt calmer—and her heart health numbers improved, too.
This isn’t just a story about one person. New research suggests that for many adults at risk for heart disease and diabetes, changing how you eat can help both your heart and your gut at the same time.
Cardiometabolic diseases—like heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes—are among the top health threats worldwide. They’re often linked to poor diets and digestive problems.
Many people with high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or extra weight also report stomach issues like bloating, pain, or irregular bowel movements. These gut problems can make daily life uncomfortable and even affect mental health.
Doctors often recommend the Mediterranean diet for heart health. It’s rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, olive oil, and fish, and low in red meat and processed foods. But until now, we didn’t know much about how this diet affects gut symptoms in people at high risk for heart disease.
For years, doctors focused on heart health when recommending the Mediterranean diet. Gut symptoms were often treated separately—with medications, fiber supplements, or elimination diets.
But here’s the twist: This study suggests that fixing your diet might help both problems at once. Instead of treating heart risk and gut issues separately, one simple change could address both.
Think of your gut like a busy highway. When you eat processed foods high in sugar and unhealthy fats, it’s like adding too many cars to the road—traffic jams, honking, and breakdowns happen. That’s your bloating, pain, and discomfort.
The Mediterranean diet is like clearing the highway. It’s full of fiber from fruits and veggies, which keeps traffic moving smoothly. Olive oil and nuts provide healthy fats that don’t clog the system. Fish adds protein without the heavy load of red meat.
This diet also feeds the good bacteria in your gut. These tiny helpers produce substances that reduce inflammation, which can calm both your stomach and your heart.
Researchers looked at data from a 12-week study of 200 adults in New Zealand. All participants had increased risk for heart disease or diabetes. Half followed a New Zealand-adapted Mediterranean diet with coaching, while the other half received general healthy eating advice.
Researchers measured gut symptoms using a standard questionnaire and tracked quality of life with a well-known survey.
The results were encouraging. People on the Mediterranean diet reported fewer gut symptoms overall, especially stomach pain and bloating.
Women, in particular, saw bigger improvements. They started with worse gut symptoms than men, but after 12 weeks, their scores improved significantly.
The study also found a strong link between gut symptoms and quality of life. When gut symptoms improved, people reported feeling better overall—more energy, less stress, and better sleep.
Here’s the key: These improvements happened while participants were also improving their heart health markers, like blood pressure and cholesterol.
A Pattern Interrupt
But there’s a catch.
This study adds to growing evidence that diet affects more than just your weight or cholesterol. What you eat can directly influence how you feel day to day, including gut comfort.
However, this was a secondary analysis, meaning the main study wasn’t designed to test gut symptoms specifically. That means the findings are promising but not definitive.
If you have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or weight concerns—and you also struggle with gut issues—this research suggests that a Mediterranean-style diet could help both problems.
You don’t need a special prescription. You can start by adding more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, olive oil, and fish to your meals, and cutting back on red meat and processed foods.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet. It’s still a dietary approach, not a medication, and results can vary.
This study had some important limits. It was a secondary analysis, so the main study wasn’t focused on gut symptoms. The participants were mostly middle-aged adults in New Zealand, so results may not apply to everyone. Also, the study lasted only 12 weeks, so we don’t know if the benefits last long-term.
Next, researchers need to design studies specifically testing the Mediterranean diet for gut symptoms. Longer trials could show whether the benefits stick over time. If results hold up, this could become a standard recommendation for people with both heart risk and gut issues.
For now, the evidence suggests that eating more Mediterranean-style foods is a safe, healthy choice that may help your heart and your gut at the same time.