Egger Garry, Stevens John, Binns Andrew, Morgan Bob
School of Health and Human Sciences, Southern Cross University, Lismore, New South Wales, Australia (GE, JS).
Goonellabah Medical Centre, Lismore, New South Wales, Australia (AB).
Am J Lifestyle Med. 2019 May 9;13(6):526-532. doi: 10.1177/1559827619845335. eCollection 2019 Nov-Dec.
We have previously identified a number of "determinants" of chronic disease, using the acronym NASTIE ODOURS. These have been given the collective term "anthropogens," in this journal and other publications, to help direct the management of modern chronic ailments to a monocausal focus, akin to that afforded infectious diseases by the "germ theory." We suggested the acronym NASTIE ODOURS as a starting point for a taxonomy of lifestyle medicine determinants. In the current article, we add 3, less quantifiable, but currently increasingly more important psychosocial experiences to these: Lack of Meaning, Alienation, and Loss of culture, changing the previous acronym to NASTIE MAL ODOURS. As with other determinants, all have accumulating evidence of an underlying low-grade, systemic, inflammatory physiological base ("metaflammation"), but with the need for further research to solidify these findings.
我们之前使用首字母缩略词NASTIE ODOURS确定了一些慢性病的“决定因素”。在本期刊和其他出版物中,这些因素被统称为“人类活动因素”,以帮助将现代慢性病的管理引导至单一病因重点,类似于“病菌理论”为传染病提供的管理方式。我们提出首字母缩略词NASTIE ODOURS作为生活方式医学决定因素分类法的起点。在当前文章中,我们在这些因素中增加了3个较难量化但目前越来越重要的社会心理体验:意义缺失、疏离感和文化丧失,将之前的首字母缩略词改为NASTIE MAL ODOURS。与其他决定因素一样,所有这些因素都有越来越多的证据表明存在潜在的低度、全身性、炎症性生理基础(“元炎症”),但需要进一步研究来巩固这些发现。