Dark chocolate, does eating it provide health benefits? Are there risks beyond the added sugar and fat to your diet?
Since around 1900-1500 BC, dark chocolate has been cultivated in Mexico and South America. Initially it was served as a drink for ceremonial and medicinal purposes, and also as a luxury for Mayan and Aztec elites.
In the 1600s, it was argued that “chocolate” should be considered a medicine because it changed a patient’s health. At that time, physicians also stated that all that was necessary for breakfast was chocolate, because it yielded good nourishment for the body.
In 2021, the global premium chocolate market size was valued at USD 75.32 billion in 2021. It is estimated to grow about 10% each year.
In clinical studies, daily consumption of high flavanol dark chocolate (~200-1000 mg flavanols/day) provided:
Consumer Lab and Consumer Reports discovered that some brands of dark chocolate contain levels of cadmium and lead. The lead levels found range from 1 to 1.9 mcg per serving, well below the FDA guidelines of under 12.5 mcg per day. Cadmium is a kidney toxin with a safe daily limit of 4.1 mcg for adults and 3 mcg for children. It has a half-life in the body of 10-35 years, so it accumulates over time. Many brands exceed this limit per serving size. See the Consumer Reports article so you can avoid them.
Consumer Lab has run tests to identify dark chocolate brands with the highest levels of flavonoids and lowest levels of cadmium. They recommend CocoaVia’s Cardio Health or Brain Health Memory+, each with over 500 mg per gram of flavanols.
Consumer Reports recommends Mast, Taza, Ghirardelli and Valrhona as safe for those who prefer chocolate bars, albeit with significantly lower levels of flavanols. Ghirardelli 72% Intense Dark has 12.7mg/g of flavanols or 318 mg per two piece serving, the second highest concentration of flavanols among chocolate bars tested by Consumer Labs. Ghirardelli 86% contains one of the lowest levels of cadmium reported.
Either consume two tablets of CocoaVia or enjoy a couple ounces of 70%+ high flavonoid dark chocolate after breakfast. Why after breakfast? Caffeine ingestion later in the day can impact high quality sleep as it takes 11 hours to leave your system.
There are 78 clinical trials testing dark chocolate on a variety of health indications. Dosages range from 200 mg to 1064 mg of flavonoids. Although funded by a chocolate manufacturer, the most comprehensive recent result is the following:
The Cocoa Supplement and Multivitamin Outcomes Study (COSMOS), funded by Mars Edge, was a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial testing a cocoa extract supplement (containing 500 mg/d flavanols), and a multivitamin supplement in the maintenance of cardiovascular health and cancer risk in a total of 21,442 participants, including 12,666 women aged ≥65 years and 8,776 men aged ≥60 years with an average of 3.6 years of treatment and follow-up.
COSMOS provides suggestive evidence that long-term cocoa extract supplementation may impact clinical cardiovascular outcomes, including a significant 27% reduction in cardiovascular death and greater cardiovascular benefits among those taking the study pills regularly.
Most brands of dark chocolate also contain sugars and unhealthy saturated fat. Eating large amounts can cause caffeine-related side effects such as nervousness, increased urination, sleeplessness, and a fast heartbeat. Additionally, from RXList:
Because dark chocolate lowers blood pressure and is a stimulant, there are many medications which can have adverse interactions. Please see the full list. Here are a few.
Dark chocolate consumption should not be mixed with medications that:
We hope you found this article on dark chocolate helpful. Your reward for reading this article and focusing on your health is to enjoy a daily dosage of dark chocolate with your next breakfast, but only if it is safe for you. If not, then perhaps another option from the list of tasty and healthy foods such as cherries, blueberries, strawberries, peaches, nectarines or almonds.
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