Department of Internal Medicine, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
J Intern Med. 2013 Jan;273(1):79-93. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2796.2012.02577.x. Epub 2012 Sep 4.
To investigate whether adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern during adolescence and early adulthood affects arterial stiffness in adulthood, and the extent to which any such association may be attributed to a beneficial impact of this diet on cardiovascular disease risk factors such as blood pressure, central fatness and dyslipidaemia.
The Amsterdam Growth and Health Longitudinal Study.
We compared longitudinal levels of adherence to a Mediterranean dietary pattern (aMED score with range 0-9) during adolescence and adulthood (two to eight repeated measures obtained between the ages of 13 and 36) between individuals with different levels of arterial stiffness in adulthood. The study population included 373 (196 women) apparently healthy adults in whom properties of the carotid, brachial and femoral arteries were assessed using ultrasonography at 36 years of age.
After adjustments for potential confounders, individuals with stiffer carotid arteries (defined on the basis of the most adverse tertile of, for instance, the distensibility coefficient) had lower aMED scores (-0.32, 95% CI -0.60; -0.06) and were less likely to have adhered to this dietary pattern (aMED score ≥5, odds ratio 0.69, 95% CI 0.50; -0.94) during the preceding 24 years compared with those with less stiff arteries. Differences in aMED scores were already present in adolescence and were only in part explained by the favourable associations between the Mediterranean dietary pattern and other cardiovascular disease risk factors (up to 26%), particularly mean blood pressure (up to 19%).
Promoting the Mediterranean diet in adolescence and early adulthood may constitute an important means of preventing arterial stiffness in adulthood.
探究青少年和成年早期遵循地中海饮食模式是否会影响成年后的动脉僵硬程度,以及这种关联在多大程度上可能归因于这种饮食模式对心血管疾病风险因素(如血压、中心性肥胖和血脂异常)产生有益影响。
阿姆斯特丹生长与健康纵向研究。
我们比较了在成年期具有不同动脉僵硬程度的个体之间,青少年和成年期(在 13 至 36 岁之间获得的两到八次重复测量)纵向水平的地中海饮食模式(aMED 评分,范围为 0-9)。研究人群包括 373 名(196 名女性)健康成年人,他们在 36 岁时使用超声评估颈动脉、肱动脉和股动脉的特性。
在调整了潜在混杂因素后,颈动脉僵硬程度较高的个体(根据例如顺应性系数的最不利三分位定义)的 aMED 评分较低(-0.32,95%CI-0.60;-0.06),并且在过去 24 年中更不可能遵循这种饮食模式(aMED 评分≥5,比值比 0.69,95%CI 0.50;-0.94)。与动脉僵硬程度较低的个体相比,青少年时期就已经存在 aMED 评分的差异,而且这种差异仅部分解释为地中海饮食模式与其他心血管疾病风险因素之间的有利关联(高达 26%),特别是平均血压(高达 19%)。
在青少年和成年早期促进地中海饮食可能是预防成年后动脉僵硬的重要手段。