Division of Nutritional Psychiatry Research, IMPACT Strategic Research Centre, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia ; Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Centre for Research on Ageing, Health and Well-being, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 29;9(1):e87657. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0087657. eCollection 2014.
Recent research suggests that diet quality influences depression risk; however, a lack of experimental evidence leaves open the possibility that residual confounding explains the observed relationships. The aim of this study was to document the cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between dietary patterns and symptoms of depression and to undertake a detailed examination of potential explanatory factors, particularly socioeconomic circumstances, in the diet-depression relationship.
Data were drawn from the Personality and Total Health (PATH) Through Life Study, a longitudinal community study following three age cohorts (20+; 40+; 60+yrs) from south-eastern Australia over three assessment periods (n=3663). Regression analyses evaluated the cross-sectional and longitudinal relationships between dietary patterns, depressive symptoms, age, detailed measures of socioeconomic circumstances, other health behaviours, and cardiovascular risk factors.
The lowest tertile of prudent (healthy) dietary pattern and the highest tertile of western (unhealthy) dietary pattern were associated with an increased likelihood of depressive symptoms. However, these contemporaneous associations were explained by adjustment for detailed measures of socioeconomic circumstances and physical activity. In prospective analyses, lower scores on the healthy dietary pattern and higher scores on the unhealthy dietary pattern independently predicted increased depressive symptoms across time, before and after adjustment for potential confounders and baseline depressive symptoms, but only for those in the oldest cohort. Dietary patterns did not explain the relationship between socioeconomic position and depressive symptoms.
The results of this study confirm that the relationship between habitual dietary intake and depressive symptoms is somewhat explained by socioeconomic circumstances and other health behaviours, but suggest that long term exposure to unhealthy dietary habits independently predisposes to depression over the lifecourse.
最近的研究表明,饮食质量会影响抑郁风险;然而,由于缺乏实验证据,仍有可能是残余混杂因素解释了观察到的关系。本研究的目的是记录饮食模式与抑郁症状之间的横断面和纵向关联,并详细研究饮食与抑郁关系中的潜在解释因素,特别是社会经济状况。
数据来自个性与整体健康(PATH)贯穿生命研究,这是一项在澳大利亚东南部对三个年龄队列(20+;40+;60+岁)进行的纵向社区研究,共进行了三次评估(n=3663)。回归分析评估了饮食模式、抑郁症状、年龄、详细的社会经济状况衡量指标、其他健康行为和心血管风险因素之间的横断面和纵向关系。
低三分位的谨慎(健康)饮食模式和高三分位的西方(不健康)饮食模式与抑郁症状的可能性增加有关。然而,这些同期关联在调整详细的社会经济状况和体育活动衡量指标后得到了解释。在前瞻性分析中,健康饮食模式评分较低和不健康饮食模式评分较高独立预测了抑郁症状的增加,这种情况跨越时间发生,在调整潜在混杂因素和基线抑郁症状之前和之后都是如此,但仅对最年长的队列适用。饮食模式并不能解释社会经济地位与抑郁症状之间的关系。
本研究的结果证实,习惯性饮食摄入与抑郁症状之间的关系在一定程度上可以用社会经济状况和其他健康行为来解释,但表明长期暴露于不健康的饮食习惯会独立导致一生中的抑郁。