Panagiotakos Demosthenes B, Pitsavos Christos, Skoumas Yannis, Stefanadis Christodoulos
Department of Nutrition-Dietetics, Harokopio University, Athens, Greece.
J Am Diet Assoc. 2007 Jun;107(6):979-87; quiz 997. doi: 10.1016/j.jada.2007.03.006.
Dietary habits have been associated with the prevalence of the metabolic syndrome.
The associations between foods or food patterns and the characteristics of the metabolic syndrome were evaluated.
Cross-sectional survey.
During 2001 to 2002, 1,514 men (aged 18 to 87 years) and 1,528 women (aged 18 to 89 years) without any clinical evidence of cardiovascular disease were randomly enrolled, from the Attica region in Greece.
Dietary habits were evaluated using a semiquantitative, food frequency questionnaire. Characteristics of the metabolic syndrome (ie, blood pressure, waist circumference, glucose, triglycerides, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol) were also measured.
Principal components analysis was applied to extract dietary patterns from 22 foods or food groups. Multivariate regression analysis evaluated the associations between the extracted dietary patterns and characteristics of the metabolic syndrome.
Six components were derived explaining 56% of the total variation in intake. Component 1 was characterized by the consumption of cereals, fish, legumes, vegetables, and fruits (explained variation 19.7%); component 2 was characterized by the intake of potatoes and meat (explained variation 11.7%), component 6 was characterized by alcohol intake (explained variation 4.8%), whereas the other components were mainly characterized by consumption of dairy and sweets. After adjusting for various confounders, component 1 was inversely associated with waist circumference, systolic blood pressure, triglycerides, positively associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels, and inversely with the likelihood of the metabolic syndrome (odds ratio [OR] 0.87, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.79 to 0.97), whereas components 2 and 6 were positively correlated with the previous indexes, and the likelihood of having the metabolic syndrome (OR 1.13, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.21 and OR 1.26, 95% CI 1.21 to 1.33).
A dietary pattern that includes cereals, fish, legumes, vegetables, and fruits was independently associated with reduced levels of clinical and biological markers linked to the metabolic syndrome, whereas meat and alcohol intake showed the opposite results.
饮食习惯与代谢综合征的患病率有关。
评估食物或食物模式与代谢综合征特征之间的关联。
横断面调查。
2001年至2002年期间,从希腊阿提卡地区随机招募了1514名男性(年龄18至87岁)和1528名女性(年龄18至89岁),他们没有心血管疾病的任何临床证据。
使用半定量食物频率问卷评估饮食习惯。还测量了代谢综合征的特征(即血压、腰围、血糖、甘油三酯和高密度脂蛋白胆固醇)。
应用主成分分析从22种食物或食物组中提取饮食模式。多变量回归分析评估了提取的饮食模式与代谢综合征特征之间的关联。
得出六个成分,解释了摄入量总变异的56%。成分1的特征是食用谷物、鱼类、豆类、蔬菜和水果(解释变异19.7%);成分2的特征是摄入土豆和肉类(解释变异11.7%),成分6的特征是饮酒(解释变异4.8%),而其他成分主要以食用乳制品和甜食为特征。在调整各种混杂因素后,成分1与腰围、收缩压、甘油三酯呈负相关,与高密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平呈正相关,与代谢综合征的可能性呈负相关(比值比[OR]0.87,95%置信区间[CI]0.79至0.97),而成分2和6与先前的指标以及患代谢综合征的可能性呈正相关(OR 1.13,95%CI 1.05至1.21和OR 1.26,95%CI 1.21至1.33)。
包括谷物、鱼类、豆类、蔬菜和水果的饮食模式与代谢综合征相关的临床和生物学标志物水平降低独立相关,而肉类和酒精摄入则显示相反的结果。