Department of Nutrition, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
Department of Biostatistics, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, United States.
J Nutr. 2023 Nov;153(11):3259-3269. doi: 10.1016/j.tjnut.2023.09.003. Epub 2023 Sep 9.
An increasingly industrialized food system has marginalized local, traditional food cultures in Puerto Rico (PR). Recent efforts to decolonize diets have promoted local food intake; however, how resulting dietary patterns may influence cardiometabolic disease remains unknown.
This study aimed to 1) identify dietary patterns in PR and 2) determine their associations with metabolic syndrome (MetS) and its components.
Data were obtained from participants (30-75 y) in PROSPECT (PR Observational Study of Psychosocial, Environmental, and Chronic Disease Trends; n = 989). Dietary patterns were derived using partial least squares analysis with food frequency questionnaire data, using nutrients associated with local food purchasing (dietary fiber, magnesium, saturated fat) as response variables. MetS was classified using harmonized criteria from clinical and laboratory measures and medication use. Fully adjusted generalized linear models tested associations between tertiles of dietary patterns and MetS.
Approximately half (52%) of the participants were classified with MetS. Four dietary patterns were revealed: conventional (legumes, coffee, and dairy), industrialized starch and meat-centric (red/processed meats, pasta, and starchy roots), industrialized sugar-centric (rice, sugary beverages, and refined grains), and neo-traditional (local plants and seafood). Individuals in the highest (compared with lowest) tertile of the industrialized starch and meat-centric dietary pattern had higher mean waist circumference (102 compared with 99 cm) (P = 0.01), fasting glucose (106 compared with 98 mg/dL) (P = 0.019), and systolic blood pressure (123 compared with 119 mmHg) (P = 0.022). Individuals in the highest (compared with lowest) tertile of the neo-traditional diet were 0.69 (0.49, 0.97) times less likely to have MetS (P = 0.035) and had 4.1 cm lower mean waist circumference (P = 0.002).
Promoting a neo-traditional diet and curbing industrialized starch and meat-centric diets may improve cardiometabolic health in PR. Results can guide local food promotion as a healthful, decolonizing approach in island settings.
日益工业化的食品体系使波多黎各(PR)的地方传统食品文化边缘化。最近,人们努力实现饮食去殖民化,提倡摄入当地食物;然而,由此产生的饮食模式如何影响心血管代谢疾病尚不清楚。
本研究旨在:1)确定 PR 的饮食模式;2)确定这些模式与代谢综合征(MetS)及其成分的关系。
数据来自 PROSPECT(PR 观察性研究心理社会、环境和慢性疾病趋势;n=989)中 30-75 岁的参与者。使用食物频率问卷数据,采用偏最小二乘法分析得出饮食模式,以与当地食物购买相关的营养素(膳食纤维、镁、饱和脂肪)作为反应变量。采用来自临床和实验室测量以及药物使用的标准对 MetS 进行分类。完全调整的广义线性模型测试了饮食模式三分位数与 MetS 之间的关系。
大约一半(52%)的参与者被诊断患有 MetS。揭示了四种饮食模式:传统模式(豆类、咖啡和奶制品)、工业化淀粉和以肉为主的模式(红色/加工肉类、意大利面和淀粉类根茎)、工业化糖为主的模式(大米、含糖饮料和精制谷物)和新传统模式(当地植物和海鲜)。与最低三分位相比,处于工业化淀粉和以肉为主的饮食模式最高三分位的个体具有更高的平均腰围(102 厘米与 99 厘米)(P=0.01)、空腹血糖(106 毫克/分升与 98 毫克/分升)(P=0.019)和收缩压(123 毫米汞柱与 119 毫米汞柱)(P=0.022)。与最低三分位相比,处于新传统饮食最高三分位的个体患 MetS 的可能性低 0.69 倍(0.49,0.97)(P=0.035),平均腰围低 4.1 厘米(P=0.002)。
提倡新传统饮食和遏制以淀粉和肉类为主的工业化饮食可能会改善 PR 的心血管代谢健康。结果可以指导当地食物推广,作为岛屿环境中健康、去殖民化的方法。