Suppr超能文献

地中海饮食与中年女性的更好的心血代谢健康相关,但与男性无关:PREVENT 痴呆队列的横断面分析。

The Mediterranean diet is associated with better cardiometabolic health for women in mid-life but not men: A PREVENT dementia cohort cross-sectional analysis.

机构信息

Edinburgh Dementia Prevention, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH4 2XU, UK.

Edinburgh Dementia Prevention, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, EH4 2XU, UK.

出版信息

Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis. 2023 Nov;33(11):2251-2260. doi: 10.1016/j.numecd.2023.07.020. Epub 2023 Jul 21.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS

The Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) has been associated with better cardiovascular health in a number of studies. This study aimed to explore cross-sectional associations between MedDiet adherence in the PREVENT Dementia (PREVENT) programme, stratified by sex.

METHODS AND RESULTS

Three MedDiet scores were calculated (MEDAS, MEDAS continuous and Pyramid) alongside a Western diet score. We used linear regression and linear mixed effects models to test for associations between the MEDAS score and cardiovascular health. Propensity scores were calculated to strengthen causality inferences from the data, and used as covariates along with total energy intake and Western diet scores. Exploratory analysis repeated the linear regression models for each individual food component. This study included 533 participants, with a mean age 51.25 (±5.40) years, and a majority of women (60.0%). Women had higher MedDiet scores across all three scoring methods, had a lower Western diet score and consumed fewer total calories. Higher MedDiet scores were associated with lower blood pressure, body mass index (BMI) and lower cardiovascular risk scores. When stratified by sex, women had significant positive associations between MedDiet scores and lower blood pressure, BMI and glycemia, whereas men only had a significant association with lower BMI.

CONCLUSION

There were significant associations between higher MedDiet scores and a number of cardiovascular health outcome measures. These associations were seen more consistently for women compared to men, which may have implications for the development of personalised nutritional recommendations to improve cardiovascular health.

摘要

背景和目的

多项研究表明,地中海饮食(MedDiet)与心血管健康状况的改善有关。本研究旨在探索 PREVENT 痴呆症(PREVENT)计划中 MedDiet 依从性与心血管健康之间的横断面关联,并按性别进行分层。

方法和结果

计算了三种 MedDiet 评分(MEDAS、MEDAS 连续评分和 Pyramid 评分)以及西方饮食评分。我们使用线性回归和线性混合效应模型来测试 MEDAS 评分与心血管健康之间的关联。计算了倾向评分,以加强对数据因果关系的推断,并将其作为协变量,与总能量摄入和西方饮食评分一起使用。探索性分析针对每个单独的食物成分重复了线性回归模型。本研究纳入了 533 名参与者,平均年龄为 51.25(±5.40)岁,其中大多数为女性(60.0%)。女性在所有三种评分方法中都具有更高的 MedDiet 评分,西方饮食评分更低,总卡路里摄入量更少。更高的 MedDiet 评分与更低的血压、体重指数(BMI)和更低的心血管风险评分相关。按性别分层时,女性的 MedDiet 评分与血压、BMI 和血糖水平呈显著正相关,而男性仅与 BMI 呈显著相关。

结论

更高的 MedDiet 评分与多项心血管健康结果指标之间存在显著关联。这些关联在女性中比男性更为一致,这可能对制定个性化营养建议以改善心血管健康产生影响。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验