Eating just one orange a day could prevent a common cause of blindness, new research suggests.
Snacking on the popular citrus fruit reduces people’s risk of developing age-related macular degeneration (AMD), which affects central vision, by 60 per cent, a study found.
Lead author Professor Bamini Gopinath, from the University of Sydney, said: ‘The data shows that flavonoids found in oranges appear to help protect against the disease.
‘Flavonoids are powerful antioxidants found in almost all fruits and vegetables, and they have important anti-inflammatory benefits for the immune system.’
Despite flavonoids also being found in other produce such as apples, for unclear reasons, only antioxidants in oranges protect against sight loss.
Eating just one orange a day could prevent a common cause of blindness (stock)
‘Even an orange once a week offers significant benefits’
The researchers analysed 2,037 adults with an average age of 49 for up to 15 years.
The participants’ diets were assessed via food questionnaires.
Results suggest that eating oranges protects against AMD compared to never snacking on the fruit.
Professor Gopinath added: ‘Even eating an orange once a week seems to offer significant benefits.’
The researchers plan to investigate what genetic and environmental factors cause eye diseases to occur.
The findings were published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
Eye patch improves vision in people battling a common condition
This comes after research released last April suggested a pioneering eye patch improves vision in people with severe age-related sight loss.
When implanted at the back of the eye of people suffering from dry macular degeneration, all experienced improved or stabilised vision, a study found.
One woman, aged 69, was even able to read 24 letters on an eye chart after having the device fitted, compared to just seven before, the research adds.
The device involves placing a wafer-thin patch coated with healthy embryonic retinal cells on the tissue near the optic nerve, which sends impulses to the brain where images are formed.
The researchers, from the University of Southern California, placed the patch, measuring 6x4mm, on the retinas of four people with advanced dry macular degeneration.
Each of the participants only had one eye tested, while the other served as a control.
One year on, the patch stabilised the disease in all of the participants’ treated eyes, while those that had not received the patch continued to deteriorate.
Two of the participants were better able to maintain their vision on a single object a year after the implant was fitted.