Kaushik Shweta, Wang Jie Jin, Wong Tien Y, Flood Victoria, Barclay Alan, Brand-Miller Jennie, Mitchell Paul
Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology, Westmead Millennium Institute, University of Sydney, Westmead Hospital, Hawkesbury Road, Westmead, NSW Australia.
Stroke. 2009 Jan;40(1):206-12. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.108.513812. Epub 2008 Oct 23.
It is unclear whether diets with high glycemic index (GI) and low cereal fiber (CF) are associated with greater risk of stroke. We aimed to assess the relationship between dietary GI and CF content, retinal microvasculature changes, and stroke-related mortality.
The study consisted of a population-based cohort, 49+ years, examined at baseline (1992 to 1994). At baseline, participants completed validated food frequency questionnaires. Mean GI was calculated using an Australian database. Retinal arteriolar and venular diameters were measured from photographs. Mortality data were derived using the Australian National Death Index.
Over 13 years, 95 of 2897 participants (3.5%) died from stroke. Increasing GI (hazard ratio, 1.91; 95% CI, 1.01 to 3.47, highest versus lowest tertile) and decreasing CF (hazard ratio, 2.13; 95% CI, 1.19 to 3.80, lowest versus highest tertile) predicted greater risk of stroke death adjusting for multiple stroke risk factors. Persons consuming food in the highest GI tertile and lowest CF tertile had a 5-fold increased risk of stroke death (hazard ratio, 5.06; 95% CI, 1.67 to 15.22). Increasing GI and decreasing CF were also associated with retinal venular caliber widening (P(trend)<0.01). Adjustment for retinal venular caliber attenuated stroke death risk associated with high GI by 50% but did not affect the risk associated with low CF consumption.
High-GI and low-CF diets predict greater stroke mortality and wider retinal venular caliber. The association between a high-GI diet and stroke death was partly explained by GI effects on retinal venular caliber, suggesting that a high-GI diet may produce deleterious anatomic changes in the microvasculature.
高血糖指数(GI)和低谷物纤维(CF)饮食是否与中风风险增加相关尚不清楚。我们旨在评估饮食GI和CF含量、视网膜微血管变化与中风相关死亡率之间的关系。
该研究包括一个基于人群的队列,年龄在49岁及以上,于基线期(1992年至1994年)进行检查。在基线期,参与者完成了经过验证的食物频率问卷。使用澳大利亚数据库计算平均GI。从照片中测量视网膜小动脉和小静脉直径。死亡率数据来自澳大利亚国家死亡指数。
在13年中,2897名参与者中有95名(3.5%)死于中风。调整多个中风风险因素后,GI升高(风险比,1.91;95%CI,1.01至3.47,最高三分位数与最低三分位数相比)和CF降低(风险比,2.13;95%CI,1.19至3.80,最低三分位数与最高三分位数相比)预示着中风死亡风险更高。食用GI最高三分位数和CF最低三分位数食物的人中风死亡风险增加了5倍(风险比,5.06;95%CI,1.67至15.22)。GI升高和CF降低也与视网膜小静脉管径增宽相关(P趋势<0.01)。调整视网膜小静脉管径后,与高GI相关的中风死亡风险降低了50%,但不影响与低CF摄入相关的风险。
高GI和低CF饮食预示着更高的中风死亡率和更宽的视网膜小静脉管径。高GI饮食与中风死亡之间的关联部分由GI对视网膜小静脉管径的影响所解释,这表明高GI饮食可能会在微血管中产生有害的解剖学变化。