Chikwetu Lucy, Vakili Parker, Takais Andrew, Younes Rabih
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States.
Department of Computer Science, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States.
Interact J Med Res. 2024 Sep 10;13:e52167. doi: 10.2196/52167.
Diet-related diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, require strict dietary management to slow down disease progression and call for innovative management strategies. Conventional diet monitoring places a significant memory burden on patients, who may not accurately remember details of their meals and thus frequently falls short in preventing disease progression. Recent advances in sensor and computational technologies have sparked interest in developing eating detection platforms.
This review investigates central hemodynamic and thermoregulatory responses as potential biomarkers for eating detection.
We searched peer-reviewed literature indexed in PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus on June 20, 2022, with no date limits. We also conducted manual searches in the same databases until April 21, 2024. We included English-language papers demonstrating the impact of eating on central hemodynamics and thermoregulation in healthy individuals. To evaluate the overall study quality and assess the risk of bias, we designed a customized tool inspired by the Cochrane assessment framework. This tool has 4 categories: high, medium, low, and very low. A total of 2 independent reviewers conducted title and abstract screening, full-text review, and study quality and risk of bias analysis. In instances of disagreement between the 2 reviewers, a third reviewer served as an adjudicator.
Our search retrieved 11,450 studies, and 25 met our inclusion criteria. Among the 25 included studies, 32% (8/25) were classified as high quality, 52% (13/25) as medium quality, and 16% (4/25) as low quality. Furthermore, we found no evidence of publication bias in any of the included studies. A consistent postprandial increase in heart rate, cardiac output, and stroke volume was observed in at least 95% (heart rate: 19/19, cardiac output: 18/19, stroke volume: 11/11) of the studies that investigated these variables' responses to eating. Specifically, cardiac output increased by 9%-100%, stroke volume by 18%-41%, and heart rate by 6%-21% across these studies. These changes were statistically significant (P<.05). In contrast, the 8 studies that investigated postprandial thermoregulatory effects displayed grossly inconsistent results, showing wide variations in response with no clear patterns of change, indicating a high degree of variability among these studies.
Our findings demonstrate that central hemodynamic responses, particularly heart rate, hold promise for wearable-based eating detection, as cardiac output and stroke volume cannot be measured by any currently available noninvasive medical or consumer-grade wearables.
PROSPERO CRD42022360600; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=360600.
与饮食相关的疾病,如2型糖尿病,需要严格的饮食管理来减缓疾病进展,并需要创新的管理策略。传统的饮食监测给患者带来了巨大的记忆负担,患者可能无法准确记住饮食细节,因此在预防疾病进展方面常常效果不佳。传感器和计算技术的最新进展引发了人们对开发饮食检测平台的兴趣。
本综述研究中心血流动力学和体温调节反应作为饮食检测潜在生物标志物的情况。
我们检索了2022年6月20日在PubMed、Web of Science和Scopus中索引的同行评审文献,无日期限制。我们还在同一数据库中进行了手动检索,直至2024年4月21日。我们纳入了展示饮食对健康个体中心血流动力学和体温调节影响的英文论文。为了评估整体研究质量并评估偏倚风险,我们设计了一种受Cochrane评估框架启发的定制工具。该工具分为4类:高、中、低和极低。共有2名独立评审员进行标题和摘要筛选、全文评审以及研究质量和偏倚风险分析。在两名评审员意见不一致的情况下,第三名评审员担任裁决者。
我们的检索共找到11450项研究,其中25项符合我们的纳入标准。在纳入的25项研究中,32%(8/25)被归类为高质量,52%(13/25)为中等质量,16%(4/25)为低质量。此外,我们在任何纳入研究中均未发现发表偏倚的证据。在至少95%(心率:19/19,心输出量:18/19,每搏输出量:11/11)研究这些变量对饮食反应的研究中,观察到餐后心率、心输出量和每搏输出量持续增加。具体而言,这些研究中心输出量增加了9% - 100%,每搏输出量增加了18% - 41%,心率增加了6% - 21%。这些变化具有统计学意义(P<0.05)。相比之下,8项研究餐后体温调节效应的研究结果差异很大,显示出反应的广泛差异且无明确变化模式,表明这些研究之间存在高度变异性。
我们的研究结果表明,中心血流动力学反应,尤其是心率,有望用于基于可穿戴设备的饮食检测,因为心输出量和每搏输出量无法通过任何目前可用的非侵入性医疗或消费级可穿戴设备进行测量。
PROSPERO CRD42022360600;https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=360600 。