Wang Xin, Ding Ning, Tucker Katherine L, Weisskopf Marc G, Sparrow David, Hu Howard, Park Sung Kyun
Departments of Epidemiology and.
Department of Clinical Laboratory and Nutritional Sciences, University of Massachusetts at Lowell, Lowell, MA.
J Nutr. 2017 Jul;147(7):1374-1383. doi: 10.3945/jn.117.249060. Epub 2017 Jun 7.
Little is known about the effects of overall dietary pattern on lead concentration. We examined the association of overall dietary patterns, derived from a semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire, with bone and blood lead concentrations. These longitudinal analyses included mostly non-Hispanic white, middle-aged-to-elderly men from the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study. Long-term lead exposures were measured as tibia and patella lead concentrations by using K-shell-X-ray fluorescence. Short-term lead exposures were measured as blood lead concentrations by using graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. Dietary pattern scores were derived by using factor analysis. Linear mixed-effects models were utilized to predict blood lead concentrations among 983 men, aged 44-92 y at baseline, with a total of 3273 observations (during 1987-2008). We constructed linear regression models to determine the relations between dietary patterns and bone lead concentrations among 649 participants with an age range of 49-93 y. Two major dietary patterns were identified: a prudent dietary pattern, characterized by high intakes of fruit, legumes, vegetables, whole grains, poultry, and seafood; and a Western dietary pattern, characterized by high intakes of processed meat, red meat, refined grains, high-fat dairy products, French fries, butter, and eggs. After adjusting for age, smoking status, body mass index, total energy intake, education, occupation, neighborhood-based education and income level, men in the highest tertile of the Western pattern score (compared with the lowest) had 0.91 μg/dL (95% CI: 0.41, 1.42 μg/dL) higher blood lead, 5.96 μg/g (95% CI: 1.76, 10.16 μg/g) higher patella lead, and 3.83 μg/g (95% CI: 0.97, 6.70 μg/g) higher tibia lead. No significant association was detected with the prudent dietary pattern in the adjusted model. These findings suggest that the Western diet is associated with a greater lead body burden among the middle-aged-to-elderly men. More studies are needed to examine the underlying mechanisms by which dietary patterns are associated with lead concentrations.
关于总体饮食模式对铅浓度的影响,人们了解甚少。我们通过一份半定量食物频率问卷,研究了总体饮食模式与骨骼和血液中铅浓度之间的关联。这些纵向分析主要纳入了来自退伍军人事务部规范衰老研究的非西班牙裔白人中年及老年男性。长期铅暴露通过使用K壳层X射线荧光法测量胫骨和髌骨的铅浓度来评估。短期铅暴露通过使用石墨炉原子吸收光谱法测量血铅浓度来评估。饮食模式得分通过因子分析得出。利用线性混合效应模型预测了983名基线年龄在44 - 92岁男性的血铅浓度,共进行了3273次观察(在1987 - 2008年期间)。我们构建了线性回归模型,以确定649名年龄在49 - 93岁参与者的饮食模式与骨骼铅浓度之间的关系。确定了两种主要饮食模式:一种是谨慎饮食模式,其特点是水果、豆类、蔬菜、全谷物、家禽和海鲜摄入量高;另一种是西方饮食模式,其特点是加工肉类、红肉、精制谷物、高脂肪乳制品、薯条、黄油和鸡蛋摄入量高。在调整了年龄、吸烟状况、体重指数、总能量摄入、教育程度、职业、基于社区的教育和收入水平后,西方饮食模式得分处于最高三分位数的男性(与最低三分位数相比)血铅水平高0.91μg/dL(95%CI:0.41,1.42μg/dL),髌骨铅水平高5.96μg/g(95%CI:1.76,10.16μg/g),胫骨铅水平高3.83μg/g(95%CI:0.97,6.70μg/g)。在调整后的模型中,未发现与谨慎饮食模式有显著关联。这些发现表明,西方饮食与中年及老年男性体内更高的铅负荷有关。需要更多研究来探讨饮食模式与铅浓度相关的潜在机制。