Hospital for the Elderly "Madonna del Divino Amore", Via Casilina, 1839, 00132 Borghesiana, Rome, Italy.
ASST Rhodense, Cardiac-Rehab Unit, Passirana-Rho Hospital, Via Luigi Settembrini, 1, 20017 Rho Milan, Italy.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Jul 28;17(15):5424. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17155424.
We know that metabolic syndrome (MS) is a modern cardiovascular (CV) "epidemic", especially in western populations. MS is indeed strictly related to the risk of developing CV diseases (CVD) and/or diabetes. Therefore, the aim of our multi-center study was to promote a "healthy style" for fighting MS. Each participating center analyzed its own database of outpatients and globally we have pulled out 100 volunteers to participate in the study. Before starting, we collected their written consent. Enrolled subjects have not any history of overt CVD and/or diabetes, but they matched National Cholesterol Education Program/Adult Treatment Panel (NCEP/ATP) criteria for MS. After enrolment (t0), subjects were randomly divided into two homogeneous groups: a) only diet suggestions; b) both diet and exercise prescription. Later, we measured for each subject: blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), height, weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), waist hip ratio (WHR), six-minute walking test (WT6M), distance and common blood tests such as fasting plasma glucose, high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and triglycerides (T1 assessments). At six months (T2), the same parameters were measured and then statistical comparisons were performed. Attention to diet caused significant changes only in WC and WHR, whilst a coupling of exercise and diet revealed a statistically significant improvement in HR, BP, BMI, blood samplings and WT6M too. In conclusion, a healthy lifestyle should be more encouraged by physicians and/or collaborators (such as dieticians) operating in preventive settings. Diet and physical activity may be early useful strategies in the "battle" against MS even before any medication choices. Further studies will be necessary in order to better address the topic.
我们知道代谢综合征(MS)是一种现代心血管(CV)“流行病”,尤其在西方人群中。MS 确实与发生 CV 疾病(CVD)和/或糖尿病的风险密切相关。因此,我们的多中心研究旨在倡导一种“健康生活方式”来对抗 MS。每个参与的中心分析了自己的门诊数据库,我们总共招募了 100 名志愿者参与这项研究。在开始之前,我们收集了他们的书面同意书。入组的受试者没有明显的 CVD 和/或糖尿病病史,但他们符合国家胆固醇教育计划/成人治疗小组(NCEP/ATP)的 MS 标准。入组后(t0),受试者被随机分为两组:a)仅饮食建议;b)饮食和运动处方。之后,我们为每位受试者测量:血压(BP)、心率(HR)、身高、体重、体重指数(BMI)、腰围(WC)、腰臀比(WHR)、六分钟步行试验(WT6M)、距离和常规血液检查,如空腹血糖、高密度脂蛋白(HDL)和甘油三酯(T1 评估)。六个月后(T2),测量了相同的参数,然后进行了统计比较。对饮食的关注仅导致 WC 和 WHR 发生显著变化,而运动和饮食的结合则显示 HR、BP、BMI、血液样本和 WT6M 也有统计学上的显著改善。总之,医生和/或在预防环境中合作的(如营养师)应该更鼓励健康的生活方式。饮食和体育活动可能是对抗 MS 的早期有用策略,甚至在选择任何药物之前。为了更好地解决这个问题,还需要进一步的研究。