Gross Danae C, Dahringer Jessica C, Bramblett Paige, Sun Chang, Spangler Hillary B, Lynch David H, Batsis John A
Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
School of Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 23298, USA.
Nutrients. 2025 Jan 17;17(2):326. doi: 10.3390/nu17020326.
Frailty is a geriatric syndrome of significant public health concern that causes vulnerability to physiologic stressors and an increased risk of mortality and hospitalizations. Dietary intake and quality are contributing factors to the development of frailty. The Mediterranean diet is known to be one of the healthiest eating patterns with promising health impacts for prevention. We evaluated the association between Mediterranean diet patterns and frailty status.
We conducted a cross-sectional study using National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data from 2007 to 2017. We included 7300 participants aged > 60 years who completed the first day of a 24 h diet recall and had full covariate data. We constructed an alternate Mediterranean diet (aMED) score based on the quantity of specific food-group intake and categorized participants to low-, moderate-, and high-adherence groups (aMED adherence scores of 0-2, 3-4, and 5-9, respectively). Using a modified Fried Frailty phenotype (weakness, low physical activity, exhaustion, slow walking speed, and weight loss), participants were categorized as robust (met no criteria), pre-frail (met one or two criteria), and frail (met three or more criteria). Logistic regression evaluated the association of frailty (prefrail/robust as referent) and aMED adherence.
Included participants were mainly female (54.5%) and non-Hispanic White (80.0%). The mean (SD) aMED score was 3.6 (1.6) with 45% of participants falling into moderate aMED adherence (26% low adherence, 30% high adherence). Frailty prevalence among participants was 7.1%, with most participants classified as robust (51.0%) or pre-frail (41.9%). Fully adjusted models showed significantly reduced odds of frailty with moderate-adherence and high-adherence groups (odds ratio (95%CI) of 0.71 (0.55, 0.92) and 0.52 (0.36, 0.75), respectively).
Mediterranean diet adherence is associated with decreased odds of frailty in older adults. These findings suggest that adherence to a Mediterranean diet may play a critical role in mitigating frailty and its associated conditions. Future research should include longitudinal and interventional studies that can definitively determine the effect of a Mediterranean diet on frailty and what food components provide the greatest benefit.
衰弱是一种备受公众健康关注的老年综合征,会导致机体对生理应激源的易感性增加,以及死亡和住院风险升高。饮食摄入和质量是衰弱发生发展的影响因素。地中海饮食是已知最健康的饮食模式之一,对预防疾病具有良好的健康影响。我们评估了地中海饮食模式与衰弱状态之间的关联。
我们利用2007年至2017年的美国国家健康与营养检查调查数据进行了一项横断面研究。我们纳入了7300名年龄大于60岁的参与者,他们完成了24小时饮食回顾的第一天调查,且拥有完整的协变量数据。我们根据特定食物组的摄入量构建了替代地中海饮食(aMED)评分,并将参与者分为低、中、高依从性组(aMED依从性评分分别为0 - 2、3 - 4和5 - 9)。采用改良的弗里德衰弱表型(虚弱、低体力活动、疲惫、步行速度慢和体重减轻),将参与者分为健康(未符合任何标准)、衰弱前期(符合一或两条标准)和衰弱(符合三条或更多标准)。逻辑回归分析评估了衰弱(以衰弱前期/健康为对照)与aMED依从性之间的关联。
纳入的参与者主要为女性(54.5%)和非西班牙裔白人(80.0%)。aMED评分的均值(标准差)为3.6(1.6),45%的参与者属于中等aMED依从性(26%为低依从性,30%为高依从性)。参与者中的衰弱患病率为7.1%,大多数参与者被归类为健康(51.0%)或衰弱前期(41.9%)。完全调整模型显示,中等依从性和高依从性组的衰弱几率显著降低(优势比(95%置信区间)分别为0.71(0.55,0.92)和0.52(0.36,0.75))。
坚持地中海饮食与老年人衰弱几率降低相关。这些发现表明,坚持地中海饮食可能在减轻衰弱及其相关状况方面发挥关键作用。未来的研究应包括纵向研究和干预性研究,以明确确定地中海饮食对衰弱的影响以及哪些食物成分能带来最大益处。