Palavra Natalie C, Lubomski Michal, Flood Victoria M, Davis Ryan L, Sue Carolyn M
Department of Neurology, Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Department of Neurogenetics, Kolling Institute, University of Sydney and Northern Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Front Nutr. 2021 May 7;8:628845. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2021.628845. eCollection 2021.
There is limited information about the dietary habits of patients with Parkinson's Disease (PD), or associations of diet with clinical PD features. We report on nutritional intake in an Australian PD cohort. 103 PD patients and 81 healthy controls (HCs) completed a validated, semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. Food and nutrient intake was quantified, with consideration of micronutrients and macronutrients (energy, protein, carbohydrate, fat, fibre, and added sugar). Participants also completed PD-validated non-motor symptom questionnaires to determine any relationships between dietary intake and clinical disease features. Mean daily energy intake did not differ considerably between PD patients and HCs (11,131 kJ/day vs. 10,188 kJ/day, = 0.241). However, PD patients reported greater total carbohydrate intake (279 g/day vs. 232 g/day, = 0.034). This was largely attributable to increased daily sugar intake (153 g/day vs. 119 g/day, = 0.003) and in particular free sugars (61 g/day vs. 41 g/day, = 0.001). PD patients who (1) experienced chronic pain, (2) were depressed, or (3) reported an impulse control disorder, consumed more total sugars than HCs (all < 0.05). Increased sugar consumption was associated with an increase in non-motor symptoms, including poorer quality of life, increased constipation severity and greater daily levodopa dose requirement. We provide clinically important insights into the dietary habits of PD patients that may inform simple dietary modifications that could alleviate disease symptoms and severity. The results of this study support clinician led promotion of healthy eating and careful management of patient nutrition as part of routine care.
关于帕金森病(PD)患者的饮食习惯,或饮食与临床PD特征之间的关联,目前信息有限。我们报告了澳大利亚一个PD队列中的营养摄入情况。103名PD患者和81名健康对照者(HCs)完成了一份经过验证的半定量食物频率问卷。对食物和营养摄入进行了量化,同时考虑了微量营养素和宏量营养素(能量、蛋白质、碳水化合物、脂肪、纤维和添加糖)。参与者还完成了经过PD验证的非运动症状问卷,以确定饮食摄入与临床疾病特征之间的任何关系。PD患者和HCs的平均每日能量摄入量没有显著差异(11,131千焦/天对10,188千焦/天,P = 0.241)。然而,PD患者报告的总碳水化合物摄入量更高(279克/天对232克/天,P = 0.034)。这在很大程度上归因于每日糖摄入量的增加(153克/天对119克/天,P = 0.003),尤其是游离糖(61克/天对41克/天,P = 0.001)。经历慢性疼痛、抑郁或报告有冲动控制障碍的PD患者,其总糖摄入量高于HCs(均P < 0.05)。糖摄入量的增加与非运动症状的增加有关,包括生活质量较差、便秘严重程度增加以及每日左旋多巴剂量需求增加。我们提供了关于PD患者饮食习惯的重要临床见解,这可能为简单的饮食调整提供依据,从而缓解疾病症状和严重程度。本研究结果支持临床医生在常规护理中倡导健康饮食并仔细管理患者营养。