For the study, researchers examined data on more than 200,000 U.S. adults who were followed for more than 25 years and completed questionnaires about their health and eating habits every two to four years. During the follow-up period, researchers documented a total of 6,241 stroke cases. Researchers scored participants’ diets based on the healthfulness of plant-based foods they ate. They classified people as vegetarians if they consumed no more than one serving of meat or fish per month. Being vegetarian didn’t appear to influence the risk of stroke, the study found. RELATED: Think You’re Too Young for a Stroke, Think Again But people who followed the healthiest plant-based diets were up to 10 percent less likely to have a stroke, and people who had the least healthy plant-based diets were up to 5 percent more likely to have a stroke. “A vegetarian diet simply refers to people who are not eating meat,” says Suzanne Judd, DPhil, director of the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy and a professor in public health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. “They could be replacing the meat with cookies, ice cream, and other less healthy options rather than with healthier plant based sources of protein,” says Judd, who wasn’t involved in the study. “It is for this reason that a vegetarian diet by itself is not necessarily associated with lower risk of stroke.” On the other hand, a healthful plant-based diet assumes the meat replacements are high in fiber and protein and low in added sugars — and that those replacements are often high in antioxidants and fatty acids that help prevent stroke, Judd adds. RELATED: 9 Scientific Benefits of Following a Plant-Based Diet

Mixed Results From Previous Diet Studies

The biggest limitation of this study is that it used diet questionnaires, which rely on participants to accurately recall and report what they ate instead of objectively measuring the exact amounts and types of foods they consume. Another drawback is that researchers lacked data on several factors that can influence stroke risk including blood pressure, cholesterol levels, and blood sugar levels. Previous studies exploring the connection between a plant-based diet and stroke risk have found mixed results. Like the current study, these also relied on diet questionnaires which may not provide a completely accurate picture of what people eat. One study, published in July 2020 in JAMA Internal Medicine, for example, found that people who most closely followed a healthy plant-based diet had a 14 percent lower risk of events like heart attacks and strokes. Another study, published in August 2019 in the Journal of the American Heart Association, found a healthy plant-based diet was associated with a 19 percent lower risk of dying from events like heart attacks and strokes — and no apparent benefit from following a less healthy plant-based diet. But a study published in September 2019 in The BMJ found vegetarians had a 20 percent higher risk of stroke than meat eaters. And a study published in January 2016 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found no difference in the risk of premature death from all causes based on whether or not people ate meat. The conflicting findings from previous studies may be explained by differences in the types of plant-based foods people ate, says lead author of the current study, Megu Baden, MD, PhD, of the department of nutrition at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston and the department of metabolic medicine at Osaka University in Japan. “A lot of previous studies have suggested that plant-based foods are high in components and nutrients that may reduce cardiovascular disease,” Dr. Baden says. “Potential components include dietary fiber, flavonoids and polyphenols that are more abundant in whole grains, fruits, vegetables, tea, and coffee and have been shown to have anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects.”

A variety of fruits and vegetablesWhole grainsLow-fat dairy productsSkinless poultry and fishNuts and legumesVegetable oils, such as olive, corn, peanut or canola oil

At the same time, the AHA recommends limiting or avoiding the following things:

Foods and drinks that are high-calorie and low in nutrientsSaturated and trans fatsSodium

The healthy plant-based diet that was associated with a lower stroke risk in the current study appeared to meet these criteria, says Vandana Sheth, RDN, CDCES, a private nutrition practitioner in Los Angeles and the author of My Indian Table: Quick & Tasty Vegetarian Recipes. Other diets that include some fish, poultry, and lean meat may also fit the bill, says Sheth, who wasn’t involved in the current study. Two examples are the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet and a Mediterranean-style diet. These are both diets that emphasize consuming fruits, vegetables, whole grains, vegetable oils, nuts, fish, and poultry, and limiting red meat, added sugars, and salt. “While the current study primarily found that a healthful plant-based diet was significantly associated with a lower total stroke risk, previous studies have shown that a DASH or Mediterranean eating pattern may be associated with a lower risk of stroke,” Sheth says. If you aren’t ready to completely eliminate meat from your diet, you can still eat in a way that minimizes your stroke risk, Sheth adds. “By making small changes in the diet, such as increasing intake of fruits, vegetables, or whole grains by three servings per day, and decreasing intake of refined grains, added sugars, or red meat by two servings per day, you can decrease stroke risk,” Sheth advises. RELATED: The 8 Best Whole Grains for Type 2 Diabetes