U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center, Food Surveys Research Group, 10300 Baltimore Avenue, Building 005, Beltsville, MD 20705-2350, USA.
National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging, Laboratory of Epidemiology & Population Sciences, 251 Bayview Boulevard, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
Nutrients. 2022 May 4;14(9):1924. doi: 10.3390/nu14091924.
Despite research that suggests flavonoids protect against metabolic syndrome (MetS) and evidence that intake of these compounds differs by race, knowledge about whether flavonoid-MetS associations vary among racial groups is limited. This study sought to estimate usual total flavonoid intake in African American and White adults and assess its sex- and sex/race-specific associations with MetS and its risk factors. Analysis of cross-sectional data from 1837 adults participating in the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span (HANDLS) study were analyzed. Usual total flavonoid intake was estimated using the NCI Method, and logistic regression measured its linkages with health outcomes. Among males overall and when stratified by race, odds of MetS and its risk factors low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) and elevated glucose were lower at the 75th percentile of usual total flavonoid intake than at the 25th percentile (OR for MetS = 0.62; 95% CI = 0.53, 0.71). However, low HDL-C and elevated glucose were positively associated with usual flavonoid intake among females. The comparable associations by race within sex imply that the relationships between flavonoid and health outcomes may be evident across an array of intakes.
尽管有研究表明类黄酮可预防代谢综合征(MetS),并且有证据表明这些化合物的摄入量因种族而异,但关于类黄酮与 MetS 之间的关联是否因种族群体而异的知识有限。本研究旨在估计非裔美国人和白人成年人的总类黄酮摄入量,并评估其与 MetS 及其危险因素的性别和性别/种族特异性关联。对参与多样性跨越生命跨度的邻里健康老龄化研究(HANDLS)的 1837 名成年人的横断面数据进行了分析。使用 NCI 方法估计通常的总类黄酮摄入量,并使用逻辑回归测量其与健康结果的联系。在男性和按种族分层的情况下,与 MetS 及其危险因素(低高密度脂蛋白胆固醇(HDL-C)和高血糖)相关的几率在总类黄酮摄入量的第 75 百分位数处低于第 25 百分位数(MetS 的 OR = 0.62;95%CI=0.53,0.71)。然而,在女性中,低 HDL-C 和高血糖与通常的类黄酮摄入量呈正相关。性别内的可比种族关联表明,类黄酮与健康结果之间的关系可能在一系列摄入量中都很明显。