Each woman was asked to provide details
about what she typically ate some 15 years earlier.
The researchers found that women under
75 were less likely to develop age related macular degeneration
(AMD) if over the 15 years they consistently ate lots
of vegetables such as leafy green vegetables, sweet
corn, squash, broccoli and peas, reported online edition
of Daily Mail.
The vegetables contain carotenoids - a
powerful biological antioxidant which the scientists
say may protect AMD that affects two million Britons
and is the leading cause of blindness among people over
50.
However, the scientists, writing in the
journal Archives of Ophthalmology also said their results
could simply be due to chance.
They have therefore called for more long-term
prospective studies and clinical trials to be conducted
to confirm their findings.