A healthy dietary pattern consisting of a variety of food choices is inversely associated with the development of metabolic syndrome

Abstract: 

There are limited data on healthy dietary patterns protective against metabolic syndrome (MetSyn) development. We identified dietarypatternsamong middle-aged and older adults and investigated the associations with the incidence of MetSyn. A population-based prospective cohort studyincluded 5,251 male and female Koreans aged 40-69 years. At baseline, all individuals were free of MetSyn, other major metabolic diseases, andknown cardiovascular disease or cancer. Cases of MetSyn were ascertained over a 6-year of follow-up. Dietary patterns and theirfactor scoreswere generated by factor analysis using the data of a food frequency questionnaire. We performed pooled logistic regression analysis to estimatemultivariable-adjusted relative risk (RR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for associations between factor scores and MetSyn risk. Two dietarypatterns were identified; (1) a healthy dietary pattern, which included a variety of foods such as fish, seafood, vegetables, seaweed, protein foods,fruits, dairy products, and grains; and (2) an unhealthy dietary pattern, which included a limited number of food items. Aftercontrolling for confoundingfactors, factor scores for the healthy dietary pattern were inversely associated with MetSyn risk (P-value for trend < 0.05) while those for the unhealthydietary pattern had no association. Individuals in the top quintile of the healthy diet scores showed a multivariable-adjustedRR [95% CI] of 0.76[0.60-0.97] for MetSyn risk compared with those in the bottom quintile. The beneficial effects were derived from inverse associations with abdominalobesity, low HDL-cholesterol levels, and high fasting glucose levels. Our findings suggest that a variety of healthy food choices is recommendedto prevent MetSyn.

Author(s): 
Chol Shin
Jae-Yeon Lee
Nu-Ri Jun
Myoungsook Lee
Inkyung Baik
Keywords: 
Dietary pattern
food choices
metabolic syndrome incidence
prospective study
Article Source: 
Nutrition Research and Practice ( Nutr Res Pract ) 2013;7(3):233-241
Category: 
Seaweed composition
Uses of Seaweeds: Food