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地中海生活方式指数与社区居住的老年人 24 小时收缩压和心率的关系。

Mediterranean lifestyle index and 24-h systolic blood pressure and heart rate in community-dwelling older adults.

机构信息

Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, School of Medicine, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049, Madrid, Spain.

CIBERESP (CIBER of Epidemiology and Public Health), Madrid, Spain.

出版信息

Geroscience. 2024 Feb;46(1):1357-1369. doi: 10.1007/s11357-023-00898-z. Epub 2023 Aug 10.

Abstract

Specific foods, nutrients, dietary patterns, and physical activity are associated with lower blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR), but little is known about the joint effect of lifestyle factors captured in a multidimensional score. We assessed the association of a validated Mediterranean-lifestyle (MEDLIFE) index with 24-h-ambulatory BP and HR in everyday life among community-living older adults. Data were taken from 2,184 individuals (51% females, mean age: 71.4 years) from the Seniors-ENRICA-2 cohort. The MEDLIFE index consisted of 29 items arranged in three blocks: 1) Food consumption; 2) Dietary habits; and 3) Physical activity, rest, and conviviality. A higher MEDLIFE score (0-29 points) represented a better Mediterranean lifestyle adherence. 24-h-ambulatory BP and HR were obtained with validated oscillometric devices. Analyses were performed with linear regression adjusted for the main confounders. The MEDLIFE-highest quintile (vs Q1) was associated with lower nighttime systolic BP (SBP) (-3.17 mmHg [95% CI: -5.25, -1.08]; p-trend = 0.011), greater nocturnal-SBP fall (1.67% [0.51, 2.83]; p-trend = 0.052), and lower HR (-2.04 bpm [daytime], -2.33 bpm [nighttime], and -1.93 bpm [24-h]; all p-trend < 0.001). Results were similar for each of the three blocks of MEDLIFE and by hypertension status (yes/no). Among older adults, higher adherence to MEDLIFE was associated with lower nighttime SBP, greater nocturnal-SBP fall, and lower HR in their everyday life. These results suggest a synergistic BP-related protection from the components of the Mediterranean lifestyle. Future studies should determine whether these results replicate in older adults from other Mediterranean and non-Mediterranean countries.

摘要

特定的食物、营养素、饮食模式和身体活动与较低的血压(BP)和心率(HR)有关,但对于多维评分中捕获的生活方式因素的联合影响知之甚少。我们评估了经过验证的地中海生活方式(MEDLIFE)指数与社区居住的老年人群日常生活中 24 小时动态血压和心率之间的关联。数据来自 Seniors-ENRICA-2 队列的 2184 名个体(51%为女性,平均年龄:71.4 岁)。MEDLIFE 指数由 29 个项目组成,分为三个部分:1)食物摄入;2)饮食习惯;3)体力活动、休息和社交。MEDLIFE 分数(0-29 分)越高,表示对地中海生活方式的遵循程度越好。24 小时动态血压和心率通过经过验证的振荡测量设备获得。分析通过调整主要混杂因素的线性回归进行。与 MEDLIFE 最高五分位数(与 Q1 相比)与夜间收缩压(SBP)降低相关(-3.17mmHg[95%CI:-5.25,-1.08];p 趋势=0.011),夜间 SBP 下降幅度更大(1.67%[0.51,2.83];p 趋势=0.052),心率更低(白天-2.04bpm,夜间-2.33bpm,24 小时-1.93bpm;所有 p 趋势<0.001)。MEDLIFE 的三个部分和高血压状态(是/否)的结果均相似。在老年人中,更高的 MEDLIFE 依从性与日常生活中夜间 SBP 降低、夜间 SBP 下降幅度更大和心率降低有关。这些结果表明,地中海生活方式的各个组成部分对血压有协同保护作用。未来的研究应确定这些结果在来自其他地中海和非地中海国家的老年人中是否具有可重复性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/dbf7/10828285/b801c374d992/11357_2023_898_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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