Bodde Amy E, Helsel Brian C, Sullivan Debra K, Donnelly Joseph E, Lee Daehyoung, Clina Julianne G, Ptomey Lauren T
Department of Internal Medicine, The University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas.
Department of Neurology, The University of Kansas Medical Center, Fairway, Kansas.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2025 Mar;125(3):396-404. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2024.07.164. Epub 2024 Jul 27.
Poor diet may contribute to high rates of overweight/obesity (OW/OB) in adolescents and young adults with intellectual disabilities (IDs).
The purpose of this study was to examine diet quality as assessed by Healthy Eating Index 2015 (HEI-2015) scores in adolescents and young adults with IDs and OW/OB and to compare diet quality by ID diagnosis and weight.
Three-day image-assisted food records from baseline assessments in an 18-month weight-loss trial for adolescents and young adults with IDs and OW/OB were used to calculate HEI-2015 scores, which were compared between ID diagnoses and weight categories.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: A total of 102 adolescents and young adults (aged 13 to 21 years) with IDs (48 with Down syndrome [DS], 40 with autism, and 14 with other/unspecified IDs) and OW/OB at a Midwestern academic medical center completed valid food records from November 2015 to November 2019.
Outcome measures included HEI-2015 scores, energy intake (kcal/d), macronutrient intake as percentage of energy, energy intake per kilogram body weight, and grams protein per kilogram body weight.
Differences in HEI-2015 scores and additional dietary measures by weight category and ID diagnosis were examined with analysis of variance or Kruskal-Wallis tests.
Participants with DS had a significantly higher mean ± SD HEI-2015 score (53.9 ± 8.4) compared with participants with autism (49.1 ± 9.6; P = .047). Compared with those with autism, participants with DS had a higher percentage of energy from protein, higher energy intake per kilogram body weight, and higher grams of protein intake per kilogram body weight. For HEI-2015 components, participants with DS had higher scores than participants with autism for total fruits, whole fruits, total vegetables, greens and beans, and total protein foods, but lower scores for sodium. Diet quality was not observed to differ by weight classification.
Adolescents and young adults with autism had lower overall diet quality scores compared with those with DS. Diet quality was not found to be related to OW/OB. Understanding dietary differences by ID diagnosis may inform intervention strategies.
不良饮食可能导致智障青少年和青年中超重/肥胖(OW/OB)率居高不下。
本研究旨在通过2015年健康饮食指数(HEI - 2015)评分来评估智障且超重/肥胖的青少年和青年的饮食质量,并按智障诊断类型和体重比较饮食质量。
在一项针对智障且超重/肥胖青少年和青年的为期18个月的减肥试验中,使用基线评估时为期三天的图像辅助食物记录来计算HEI - 2015评分,并在智障诊断类型和体重类别之间进行比较。
参与者/研究地点:在中西部一家学术医疗中心,共有102名年龄在13至21岁之间的智障青少年和青年(48名唐氏综合征[DS]患者、40名自闭症患者以及14名其他/未明确诊断的智障患者)且超重/肥胖,他们在2015年11月至2019年11月期间完成了有效的食物记录。
结局指标包括HEI - 2015评分、能量摄入量(千卡/天)、宏量营养素摄入量占能量的百分比、每千克体重的能量摄入量以及每千克体重的蛋白质克数。
通过方差分析或克鲁斯卡尔 - 沃利斯检验来检验HEI - 2015评分以及按体重类别和智障诊断类型划分的其他饮食指标的差异。
与自闭症患者(49.1±9.(此处原文可能有误,推测为9.6)相比,唐氏综合征患者的HEI - 2015平均±标准差评分显著更高(53.9±8.4;P = 0.047)。与自闭症患者相比,唐氏综合征患者蛋白质提供的能量百分比更高、每千克体重的能量摄入量更高以及每千克体重的蛋白质摄入量更高。对于HEI - 2015的各个组成部分,唐氏综合征患者在总水果、完整水果、总蔬菜、绿叶蔬菜和豆类以及总蛋白质食物方面的得分高于自闭症患者,但在钠方面的得分较低。未观察到饮食质量因体重分类而有所不同。
与唐氏综合征患者相比,自闭症青少年和青年的总体饮食质量得分较低。未发现饮食质量与超重/肥胖有关。了解按智障诊断类型划分的饮食差异可能为干预策略提供依据。