Jeppesen Charlotte, Bjerregaard Peter, Jørgensen Marit E
1 The National Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, Øster Farimagsgade 5A, 2nd floor, 1353 Copenhagen K, Denmark.
2 Steno Diabetes Centre, Gentofte, Denmark.
Public Health Nutr. 2014 Feb;17(2):462-70. doi: 10.1017/S136898001300013X. Epub 2013 Feb 11.
Traditional Inuit dietary patterns have been found to be beneficial for CVD but have not been investigated in relation to glucose intolerance. We examined the association between dietary patterns and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and impaired fasting glucose (IFG).
Cross-sectional design with a priori derived dietary patterns from an FFQ resulted in five patterns: imported meat (n 196), traditional food (n 601), balanced diet (n 126), unhealthy diet (n 652) and standard diet (n 799).
Associations between dietary patterns and glucose-related outcomes were tested by linear and logistic regression analyses. Data included: dietary intake by FFQ, waist circumference, ethnicity, frequency of alcohol intake and smoking, physical activity, and oral glucose tolerance test results. Fasting participants and those without diagnosed T2DM were classified into normal glucose tolerance, IGT, IFG or T2DM. HOMA-IR (homeostatic model assessment-insulin resistance index) and HOMA-β (homeostatic model assessment of β-cell function) were calculated.
Data included 2374 Inuit, aged 18+ years.
Participants with a traditional dietary pattern had higher fasting plasma glucose (mean 5·73 (95% CI 5·68, 5·78) mmol/l, P < 0·0001) and lowest HOMA-β (48·66 (95% CI 46·86, 50·40), P < 0·0001). The traditional diet gave significantly higher odds for IFG and T2DM than the balanced diet, imported meat diet, standard diet and unhealthy diet.
Traditional food was positively associated with T2DM, IFG and fasting plasma glucose, and negatively associated with β-cell function, compared with a standard diet. The imported meat diet seemed the best in relation to glucose intolerance, with lowest fasting plasma glucose and lowest odds for IFG and T2DM.
传统因纽特人饮食模式已被发现对心血管疾病有益,但尚未针对葡萄糖不耐受进行研究。我们研究了饮食模式与2型糖尿病(T2DM)、糖耐量受损(IGT)和空腹血糖受损(IFG)之间的关联。
采用横断面设计,通过食物频率问卷(FFQ)预先得出饮食模式,共分为五种模式:进口肉类(n = 196)、传统食物(n = 601)、均衡饮食(n = 126)、不健康饮食(n = 652)和标准饮食(n = 799)。
通过线性和逻辑回归分析检验饮食模式与葡萄糖相关结局之间的关联。数据包括:FFQ得出的饮食摄入量、腰围、种族、饮酒频率和吸烟情况、身体活动以及口服葡萄糖耐量试验结果。空腹参与者及未确诊T2DM的参与者被分类为糖耐量正常、IGT、IFG或T2DM。计算稳态模型评估胰岛素抵抗指数(HOMA-IR)和稳态模型评估β细胞功能(HOMA-β)。
数据包括2374名18岁及以上的因纽特人。
具有传统饮食模式的参与者空腹血糖较高(平均5·73(95%可信区间5·68,5·78)mmol/L,P < 0·0001),HOMA-β最低(48·66(95%可信区间46·86,50·40),P < 0·0001)。与均衡饮食、进口肉类饮食、标准饮食和不健康饮食相比,传统饮食导致IFG和T2DM的几率显著更高。
与标准饮食相比,传统食物与T2DM、IFG和空腹血糖呈正相关,与β细胞功能呈负相关。进口肉类饮食在葡萄糖不耐受方面似乎最佳,空腹血糖最低,IFG和T2DM的几率也最低。