Dhillon Preet K, Bowen Liza, Kinra Sanjay, Bharathi Ankalmadugu Venkatsubbareddy, Agrawal Sutapa, Prabhakaran Dorairaj, Reddy Kolli Srinath, Ebrahim Shah
1Centre for Control of Chronic Conditions,Public Health Foundation of India,4th floor, Plot 47,Sector 44, Gurgaon 122002, Haryana,India.
2London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,London,UK.
Public Health Nutr. 2016 Nov;19(16):3017-3026. doi: 10.1017/S1368980016001233. Epub 2016 Jun 22.
Legume consumption is associated with lower fasting glucose (FG) and insulin levels in nutrition trials and lower CVD mortality in large-scale epidemiological studies. In India, legumes are widely consumed in various preparations, yet no epidemiological study has evaluated the association of legumes with FG levels, insulin resistance and diabetes risk. The present study aimed to fill this gap.
Fasting blood samples, in-person interviews to obtain information on demographic/socio-economic factors, physical activity, alcohol and tobacco use, and anthropometric measurements were collected. Dietary intakes were assessed by an interviewer-administered, validated, semi-quantitative FFQ.
Lucknow, Nagpur, Hyderabad and Bangalore, India.
Men and women (n 6367) aged 15-76 years - urban residents, urban migrants and their rural siblings.
In multivariate random-effects models adjusted for age, BMI, total energy intake, macronutrients, physical activity and rural/migration status, daily legume consumption was not associated with FG (P-for-trend=0·78), insulin resistance (homeostasis model assessment score; P-for-trend=0·73) or the prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (P-for-trend=0·41). Stratified analyses by vegetarian diet and migration status did not change the findings. Inverse associations between legumes and FG emerged for participants with lower BMI and higher carbohydrate, protein, fat and sugar intakes.
Although legumes are essential in traditional Indian diets, as well as in prudent and Mediterranean diets in the West, we did not find an association between legumes and markers of glycaemic control, insulin resistance or diabetes, except for subgroups based on BMI and macronutrient intake. The ubiquitous presence and complexity of legume preparations in Indian diets may contribute to these findings.
在营养试验中,食用豆类与较低的空腹血糖(FG)和胰岛素水平相关,在大规模流行病学研究中与较低的心血管疾病死亡率相关。在印度,豆类在各种烹饪方式中被广泛食用,但尚无流行病学研究评估豆类与FG水平、胰岛素抵抗和糖尿病风险之间的关联。本研究旨在填补这一空白。
采集空腹血样,进行面对面访谈以获取人口统计学/社会经济因素、身体活动、饮酒和吸烟情况等信息,并进行人体测量。通过访员管理的、经过验证的半定量食物频率问卷评估饮食摄入量。
印度勒克瑙、那格浦尔、海得拉巴和班加罗尔。
年龄在15 - 76岁的男性和女性(n = 6367)——城市居民、城市移民及其农村亲属。
在根据年龄、体重指数(BMI)、总能量摄入、常量营养素、身体活动以及农村/移民状况进行调整的多变量随机效应模型中,每日豆类摄入量与FG(趋势P值 = 0.78)、胰岛素抵抗(稳态模型评估得分;趋势P值 = 0.73)或2型糖尿病患病率(趋势P值 = 0.41)均无关联。按素食饮食和移民状况进行的分层分析并未改变研究结果。对于BMI较低且碳水化合物、蛋白质、脂肪和糖摄入量较高的参与者,豆类与FG之间呈现负相关。
尽管豆类在印度传统饮食以及西方的谨慎饮食和地中海饮食中都很重要,但我们并未发现豆类与血糖控制指标、胰岛素抵抗或糖尿病之间存在关联,不过基于BMI和常量营养素摄入量的亚组除外。印度饮食中豆类烹饪方式的普遍存在和复杂性可能导致了这些研究结果。