Avocado Nutrition Center, Mission Viejo, CA, USA.
USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Eur J Nutr. 2023 Aug;62(5):2105-2113. doi: 10.1007/s00394-023-03134-8. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
Since avocado consumption has been linked to a possible reduction in inflammation, we investigated associations between avocado consumption and markers of inflammation in a population-based multi-ethnic cohort [Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA)].
We used a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) at MESA exam 1 to capture avocado/guacamole consumption. To calculate daily servings of avocado/guacamole, we used both frequency and serving size data from the FFQ. We classified participants into three consumer groups: rare or never (daily serving ≤ 0.03), medium (0.03 < daily serving < 0.1), and heavy (0.1 ≤ daily serving). Inflammation was estimated by natural log-transformed inflammatory biomarkers (CRP, IL-2, IL-6, homocysteine, fibrinogen, TNF-a soluble receptors). We used multivariate general linear regression models to assess associations accounting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, educational level, income, energy intake, smoking status, physical activity, diet quality, body mass index, and diabetes type.
Among 5794 MESA participants, the average age and BMI were 62.25 y ± 10.26 and 28.28 ± 5.41 kg/m, respectively, and 48% of the sample were men. Participants self-reported as Hispanic (22.30%), Caucasian (39.92%), African-American (25.39%), and Chinese (12.39%). Over 60% had higher than a high school education and 40% made $50,000 or more a year. Regarding avocado/guacamole consumption, 79% were categorized as rare or never, 12% as medium, and 9% as heavy. When adjusted for relevant confounders, there were no significant differences among the three consumer groups for any inflammatory marker.
In this cross-sectional study, we did not find that consumption of avocado/guacamole was associated with levels of inflammatory markers.
由于鳄梨的食用与炎症的可能减少有关,我们在一个基于人群的多民族队列[动脉粥样硬化的多民族研究(MESA)]中研究了鳄梨的食用与炎症标志物之间的关联。
我们在 MESA 检查 1 中使用食物频率问卷(FFQ)来捕获鳄梨/鳄梨酱的食用情况。为了计算鳄梨/鳄梨酱的每日份量,我们使用了 FFQ 中的频率和份量数据。我们将参与者分为三组消费者:很少或从不食用(每日份量≤0.03),中等食用(0.03<每日份量<0.1)和大量食用(0.1≤每日份量)。炎症是通过自然对数转换的炎症生物标志物(CRP、IL-2、IL-6、同型半胱氨酸、纤维蛋白原、TNF-a 可溶性受体)来估计的。我们使用多变量一般线性回归模型来评估考虑年龄、性别、种族/族裔、教育水平、收入、能量摄入、吸烟状况、身体活动、饮食质量、体重指数和糖尿病类型的关联。
在 5794 名 MESA 参与者中,平均年龄和 BMI 分别为 62.25 y±10.26 和 28.28±5.41 kg/m,样本中 48%为男性。参与者自我报告为西班牙裔(22.30%)、白种人(39.92%)、非裔美国人(25.39%)和中国人(12.39%)。超过 60%的人受过高等教育,40%的人年收入在 5 万美元或以上。关于鳄梨/鳄梨酱的食用情况,79%的人被归类为很少或从不食用,12%的人属于中等食用,9%的人属于大量食用。在调整了相关混杂因素后,三组消费者在任何炎症标志物方面均无显著差异。
在这项横断面研究中,我们没有发现食用鳄梨/鳄梨酱与炎症标志物的水平有关。