Barclay Chris, Procter Kimberley L, Glendenning Robert, Marsh Peter, Freeman Jenny, Mathers Nigel
Academic Unit of Primary Medical Care, University of Sheffield, Northern General Hospital, Herries Road, Sheffield, S5 7AU.
Br J Gen Pract. 2008 Aug;58(553):541-7. doi: 10.3399/bjgp08X319701.
The increasing incidence of type 2 diabetes mellitus is attributed to increasing weight, reduced physical activity, and poor diet quality. Lifestyle change in patients with pre-diabetes can reduce progression to diabetes but this is difficult to achieve in practice.
To study the effectiveness of a lifestyle-change intervention for pre-diabetes in general practice.
A feasibility study.
A medium-sized general practice in Sheffield.
Participants were 33 patients with pre-diabetes. The intervention was a 6-month delayed entry comparison of usual treatment with a lifestyle-change programme: increased exercise and diet change, either reduction in glycaemic load, or reduced-fat diet. The main outcome measures were weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, fasting glucose, lipid profile, and nutrition.
A statistically significant difference was observed between control and intervention groups in three markers for risk of progression to diabetes (weight (P<0.03), BMI (P<0.03), and waist circumference (P<0.001)). No significant differences in fasting glucose or lipid profiles were seen. Aggregated data showed a statistically non-significant improvement in all the measures of metabolic risk of progression to diabetes in the low-glycaemic-load group when compared with a low-fat-diet group (P>0.05). Significant total energy, fat, and carbohydrate intake reduction was achieved and maintained in both groups.
A lifestyle-change intervention feasibility programme for pre-diabetic patients was implemented in general clinical practice. The potential of a low-glycaemic-load diet to be more effective than a low-fat diet in promoting change in the features associated with progression to diabetes is worthy of further investigation.
2型糖尿病发病率的上升归因于体重增加、体力活动减少和饮食质量差。糖尿病前期患者的生活方式改变可降低发展为糖尿病的风险,但在实际中难以实现。
研究在普通医疗中针对糖尿病前期进行生活方式改变干预的有效性。
一项可行性研究。
谢菲尔德的一家中型普通诊所。
参与者为33例糖尿病前期患者。干预措施是将常规治疗与生活方式改变计划进行为期6个月的延迟入组比较:增加运动和改变饮食,即降低血糖负荷或低脂饮食。主要观察指标包括体重、体重指数(BMI)、腰围、空腹血糖、血脂谱和营养状况。
在进展为糖尿病风险的三个指标上,对照组和干预组之间存在统计学显著差异(体重(P<0.03)、BMI(P<0.03)和腰围(P<0.001))。空腹血糖或血脂谱未见显著差异。汇总数据显示,与低脂饮食组相比,低血糖负荷组在所有进展为糖尿病的代谢风险指标上有统计学上不显著的改善(P>0.05)。两组均实现并维持了总能量、脂肪和碳水化合物摄入量的显著降低。
在普通临床实践中实施了一项针对糖尿病前期患者的生活方式改变干预可行性计划。低血糖负荷饮食在促进与进展为糖尿病相关特征改变方面比低脂饮食更有效的潜力值得进一步研究。