Chen Luowei, Zhong Wansi, Chen Hui, Zhou Ying, Ran Wang, He Yaode, Zhang Tingxia, Zhu Xiao, Xu Xin, Yuan Changzheng, Lou Min
Department of Neurology, the Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, China.
School of Public Health and the Second Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Hangzhou, China.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2025 Jan;26(1):105331. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2024.105331. Epub 2024 Oct 30.
Given the particularity of Asian cultures and dietary habits, there is a need to establish a neuroprotective dietary pattern specially for the Asian stroke high-risk population, to prevent cognitive impairment.
A systematic review and cross-sectional study.
Chinese stroke high-risk population from the CIRCLE (NCT03542734) study.
The Oriental Intervention for Enhanced Neurocognitive healTh (ORIENT) diet was developed by replacing the western foods in the Mediterranean-DASH diet Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diet with appropriate Asian alternatives, and refining the recommended intake frequency based on a systematic review, which examined Asian studies in the cognition-diet field. Cognitive impairment was defined as a global cognitive score ≥1 SD below the sample mean, based on the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and Canadian Stroke Network vascular cognitive impairment battery.
A total of 568 participants were finally included, with 325 men (57.2%) and a mean age of 60.5 ± 7.3 years. Participants in the highest tertile of ORIENT score had 60.5% lower odds of cognitive impairment than those in the lowest tertile (odds ratio = 0.395, 95% CI = 0.165-0.944, P = .044) when adjusted for demographic variables, lifestyle factors, and health status. Multiple linear regression analysis showed that each 1-point increase in ORIENT score was associated with 0.048 higher global cognitive score, 0.281 higher Mini-Mental State Examination score, and 0.344 higher Montreal Cognitive Assessment score.
High adherence to ORIENT diet was associated with lower odds of cognitive impairment, providing a potential neuroprotective dietary pattern for Chinese stroke high-risk population.
鉴于亚洲文化和饮食习惯的特殊性,有必要为亚洲中风高危人群建立一种专门的神经保护饮食模式,以预防认知障碍。
系统评价和横断面研究。
来自CIRCLE(NCT03542734)研究的中国中风高危人群。
东方增强神经认知健康干预(ORIENT)饮食是通过用合适的亚洲食物替代地中海-DASH饮食干预神经退行性延迟(MIND)饮食中的西方食物,并根据一项系统评价来细化推荐的摄入频率而制定的,该系统评价考察了认知-饮食领域的亚洲研究。根据美国国立神经疾病和中风研究所及加拿大中风网络血管性认知障碍量表,认知障碍被定义为总体认知得分比样本均值低≥1个标准差。
最终共纳入568名参与者,其中男性325名(57.2%),平均年龄60.5±7.3岁。在调整了人口统计学变量、生活方式因素和健康状况后,ORIENT得分最高三分位数的参与者发生认知障碍的几率比最低三分位数的参与者低60.5%(优势比=0.395,95%置信区间=0.165-0.944,P=0.044)。多元线性回归分析表明,ORIENT得分每增加1分,总体认知得分就会提高0.048,简易精神状态检查表得分提高0.281,蒙特利尔认知评估得分提高0.344。
高度坚持ORIENT饮食与较低的认知障碍几率相关,为中国中风高危人群提供了一种潜在的神经保护饮食模式。