8 Potential Health Benefits of Avocados
8 Health Benefits of Avocado
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Avocados are also extremely versatile. One can be the main event at breakfast, lunch, or dinner — spread onto toasted bread, blended into a chocolate mousse, or sliced atop a salmon and grain bowl. Avocado can even be whipped into sauces and mashed into dips (see your favorite guacamole). Their relatively mild taste is the perfect vehicle for toppings and seasonings, and a little salt goes a long way in making them shine.
Among plant-based foods, avocados distinguish themselves by offering healthy fats in addition to fiber and potassium, which may explain why they’ve been linked to such a wide range of health benefits. Here are eight ways that avocados may help your health.

1. Their Unsaturated Fats Are Good for Heart Health
2. They Could Lower Your Risk for Type 2 Diabetes

3. An Avocado-Rich Diet Is Linked to a More Active Lifestyle
Shapira adds that avocados complement an active lifestyle. “They aid in energy, muscle function, and recovery,” she says. “The combination of healthy fats, vitamins, and minerals provide essential nutrients for our active bodies.”
4. Avocados Are Great for Your Gut
5. As a Regular Part of Your Diet, Avocados Could Aid Weight Management
6. Nutrients in Avocados Could Give Your Brain a Boost
7. The Nutrients in Avocados Could Give Your Skin a Glow
8. Antioxidants in Avocados Have Been Linked to Sharper Vision

Reyna Franco, RDN
Medical Reviewer
Reyna Franco, RDN, is a New York City–based dietitian-nutritionist, certified specialist in sports dietetics, and certified personal trainer. She is a diplomate of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine and has a master's degree in nutrition and exercise physiology from Columbia University.
In her private practice, she provides medical nutrition therapy for weight management, sports nutrition, diabetes, cardiac disease, renal disease, gastrointestinal disorders, cancer, food allergies, eating disorders, and childhood nutrition. To serve her diverse patients, she demonstrates cultural sensitivity and knowledge of customary food practices. She applies the tenets of lifestyle medicine to reduce the risk of chronic disease and improve health outcomes for her patients.
Franco is also a corporate wellness consultant who conducts wellness counseling and seminars for organizations of every size. She taught sports nutrition to medical students at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, taught life cycle nutrition and nutrition counseling to undergraduate students at LaGuardia Community College, and precepts nutrition students and interns. She created the sports nutrition rotation for the New York Distance Dietetic Internship program.
She is the chair of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine's Registered Dietitian-Nutritionist Member Interest Group. She is also the treasurer and secretary of the New York State Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, having previously served in many other leadership roles for the organization, including as past president, awards committee chair, and grant committee chair, among others. She is active in the local Greater New York Dietetic Association and Long Island Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, too.

Kayla Blanton
Author
Kayla Blanton is a Cincinnati-based freelance writer who covers a range of lifestyle topics, including health, wellness, food, beauty, and entertainment. Her work has been featured on Prevention.com, MensHealth.com, Bustle, and Eat This, Not That, among other outlets.
She received a bachelor's degree in journalism from the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism at Ohio University, with specializations in public health and women, gender, and sexuality studies.
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