31 results on '"Moñino, M."'
Search Results
2. Legume consumption is inversely associated with type 2 diabetes incidence in adults: A prospective assessment from the PREDIMED study
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Serra-Mir, M., Pérez-Heras, A., Viñas, C., Casas, R., Medina-Renom, A., Baena, J.M., García, M., Oller, M., Amat, J., Duaso, I., García, Y., Iglesias, C., Simón, C., Quinzavos, L., Parra, L., Liroz, M., Benavent, J., Clos, J., Pla, I., Amorós, M., Bonet, M.T., Martín, M.T., Sánchez, M.S., Altirriba, J., Manzano, E., Altés, A., Cofán, M., Valls-Pedret, C., Sala-Vila, A., Doménech, M., Bulló, M., Babio, N., Basora, J., González, R., Molina, C., Márquez, F., Martínez, P., Ibarrola, N., Sorlí, M., García Roselló, J., Castro, A., Martin, F., Tort, N., Isach, A., Guasch-Ferre, M., Cabré, J.J., Mestres, G., Paris, F., Llauradó, M., Pedret, R., Basells, J., Vizcaino, J., Segarra, R., Frigola, J., Costa-Vizcaino, J., Salas-Huetos, A., Boj, J., Montañes, D., Papandreou, Christopher, Fernández-Ballart, J., Carrasco, P., Ortega-Azorín, C., Asensio, E.M., Osma, R., Barragán, R., Francés, F., Guillén, M., González, J.I., Sáiz, C., Portolés, O., Giménez, F.J., Coltell, O., Fernández-Carrión, R., Guillem-Sáiz, P., González-Monje, I., Quiles, L., Pascual, V., Riera, C., Pages, M.A., Godoy, D., Carratalá-Calvo, A., Sánchez-Navarro, S., Valero-Barceló, C., Tello, S., Vila, J., de la Torre, R., Muñoz-Aguayo, D., Elosua, R., Marrugat, J., Schröder, H., Molina, N., Maestre, E., Rovira, A., Castañer, O., Farré, M., Toledo, E., Ruiz-Canela, M., Sanjulián, B., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Eguaras, S., Martí, A., Buil-Cosiales, P., SerranoMartínez, M., Diez-Espino, J., García-Arellano, A., Martínez-Lapiscina, E.H., Goñi, E., Vázquez, Z., Berrade, N., Extremera-Urabayen, V., Arroyo-Azpa, C., García-Pérez, L., Villanueva-Telleria, J., Cortés-Ugalde, F., Sagredo-Arce, T., Vigata-López, M.D., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Urtasun-Samper, A., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Churio-Beraza, B., Arós, F., Salaverria, I., del Hierro, T., Algorta, J., Francisco, S., Alonso-Gómez, A., Sanz, E., Rekondo, J., Belló, M.C., Loma-Osorio, A., Gómez-Gracia, E., Wärnberg, J., Benítez Pont, R., Bianchi Alba, M., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Martínez-González, J., Velasco García, V., de Diego Salas, J., Baca Osorio, A., Gil Zarzosa, J., Sánchez Luque, J.J., Vargas López, E., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, V., Sánchez Perona, J., Montero Romero, E., García-García, M., Jurado-Ruiz, E., Fiol, M., Romaguera, D., García-Valdueza, M., Moñino, M., Munuera, S., Vivó, M., Bestard, F., Munar, J.A., Coll, L., Proenza, A., Prieto, R., Frontera, G., Fiol, F., Ginard, M., Jover, A., García, J., Santos-Lozano, J.M., Ortega-Calvo, M., Mellado, L., García-Corte, F.J., Román, P., Iglesias, P., Corchado, Y., Miró-Moriano, L., Domínguez-Espinaco, C., Lozano-Rodriguez, J.M., Vaquero-Diaz, S., López- Sabater, M.C., Castellote-Bargalló, A.I., Quifer-Rada, P., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Díaz-Benítez, E.M., Sánchez-Villegas, A., Casañas-Quintana, L.T., Pérez-Cabrera, J., Ruano-Rodríguez, C., Bautista-Castaño, I., Sarmiento de la Fe, F., García Pastor, J.A., Díaz-González, B.V., Castillo Anzalas, J.M., Sosa-Also, R.E., Medina-Ponce, J., de la Cruz, E., Fanlo-Maresma, M., Galera, A., Trias, F., Sarasa, I., Corbella, E., Corbella, X., Cabezas, C., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, M.A., García, L., Flores, G., Verdú, J.M., Baby, P., Ramos, A., Mengual, L., Roura, P., Yuste, M.C., Guarner, A., Santamaría, M.I., Mata, M., de Juan, C., Brau, A., Tur, J.A., Portillo, M.P., Sáez, G., Aldamiz-Echevarría, M., Alonso-Gómez, A.M., Berjón, J., Forga, L., Gállego, J., García-Layana, A., Larrauri, A., Portu-Zapirain, J., Timiraus-Fernández, J., Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, Díaz-López, Andrés, Rosique-Esteban, Núria, Ros, Emilio, Buil-Cosiales, Pilar, Corella, Dolores, Estruch, Ramon, Fitó, Montserrat, Serra-Majem, Lluís, Arós, Fernando, Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa Maria, Fiol, Miquel, Santos-Lozano, José Manuel, Díez-Espino, Javier, Portoles, Olga, and Salas-Salvadó, Jordi
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- 2018
- Full Text
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3. An Energy-Reduced Mediterranean Diet, Physical Activity, and Body Composition: An Interim Subgroup Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Randomized Clinical Trial
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Konieczna, J; Ruiz-Canela, M; Galmes-Panades, AM; Abete, I; Babio, N; Fiol, M; Martín-Sánchez, V; Estruch, R; Vidal, J; Buil-Cosiales, P; García-Gavilán, JF; Moñino, M; Marcos-Delgado, A; Casas, R; Olbeyra, R; Fitó, M; Hu, FB; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Martínez, JA; Romaguera, D; Salas-Salvadó, J, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Konieczna, J; Ruiz-Canela, M; Galmes-Panades, AM; Abete, I; Babio, N; Fiol, M; Martín-Sánchez, V; Estruch, R; Vidal, J; Buil-Cosiales, P; García-Gavilán, JF; Moñino, M; Marcos-Delgado, A; Casas, R; Olbeyra, R; Fitó, M; Hu, FB; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Martínez, JA; Romaguera, D; Salas-Salvadó, J
- Abstract
Importance: Strategies targeting body composition may help prevent chronic diseases in persons with excess weight, but randomized clinical trials evaluating lifestyle interventions have rarely reported effects on directly quantified body composition. Objective: To evaluate the effects of a lifestyle weight-loss intervention on changes in overall and regional body composition. Design, Setting, and Participants: The ongoing Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea-Plus (PREDIMED-Plus) randomized clinical trial is designed to test the effect of the intervention on cardiovascular disease prevention after 8 years of follow-up. The trial is being conducted in 23 Spanish research centers and includes men and women (age 55-75 years) with body mass index between 27 and 40 and metabolic syndrome. The trial reported herein is an interim subgroup analysis of the intermediate outcome body composition after 3-year follow-up, and data analysis was conducted from February 1 to November 30, 2022. Of 6874 total PREDIMED-Plus participants, a subsample of 1521 individuals, coming from centers with access to a dual energy x-ray absorptiometry device, underwent body composition measurements at 3 time points. Intervention: Participants were randomly allocated to a multifactorial intervention based on an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) and increased physical activity (PA) or to a control group based on usual care, with advice to follow an ad libitum MedDiet, but no physical activity promotion. Main Outcomes and Measures: The outcomes (continuous) were 3-year changes in total fat and lean mass (expressed as percentages of body mass) and visceral fat (in grams), tested using multivariable linear mixed-effects models. Clinical relevance of changes in body components (dichotomous) was assesse
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- 2023
4. Milk and Dairy Products Intake Is Related to Cognitive Impairment at Baseline in Predimed Plus Trial
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Garach AM, Cornejo-Pareja I, Martínez-González MÁ, Bulló M, Corella D, Castañer O, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Bernal-López MR, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, López-Miranda J, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía-Martín P, Daimiel L, Sánchez VM, Vidal J, Prieto L, Ros E, Fernández-Aranda F, Camacho-Barcia L, Ortega-Azorin C, Soria M, Fiol M, Compañ-Gabucio L, Goicolea-Güemez L, Pérez-López J, Goñi N, Pérez-Cabrera J, Sacanella E, Fernández-García JC, Miró-Moriano L, Gimenez-Gracia M, Razquin C, Paz-Graniel I, Guillem P, Zomeño MD, Moñino M, Oncina-Canovas A, Salaverria-Lete I, Toledo E, Salas-Salvadó J, Schröder H, Tinahones FJ, and Predimed-Plus Investigators
- Subjects
cognition ,milk ,consumption ,dairy products ,cognitive decline - Abstract
Scope To examine the association between milk and dairy products intake and the prevalence of cognitive decline among Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular risk. Methods and results Cross-sectional analyses are performed on baseline data from 6744 adults (aged 55-75 years old). Intake of milk and dairy products is estimated using a food frequency questionnaire grouped into quartiles. The risk of developing cognitive impairment is based on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). A higher prevalence of cognitive decline was found in subjects who consumed more grams. Patients with worse MMSE score (10-24) consumed a mean of 395.14 +/- 12.21 g, while patients with better MMSE score (27-30) consumed a mean of 341.23 +/- 2.73 g (p < 0.05). Those subjects with the lower milk consumption (
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- 2021
5. Milk and Dairy Products Intake Is Related to Cognitive Impairment at Baseline in Predimed Plus Trial
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Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Muñoz-Garach, A; Cornejo-Pareja, I; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Bulló, M; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Romaguera, D; Vioque, J; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Martínez, JA; Serra-Majem, L; Estruch, R; Bernal-López, MR; Lapetra, J; Pintó, X; Tur, JA; López-Miranda, J; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Matía-Martín, P; Daimiel, L; Sanchez, VM; Vidal, J; Prieto, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Camacho-Barcia, L; Ortega-Azorin, C; Soria, M; Fiol, M; Compañ-Gabucio, L; Goicolea-Guemez, L; Pérez-López, J; Goñi, N; Pérez-Cabrera, J; Sacanella, E; Fernandez-García, JC; Miró-Moriano, L; Gimenez-Gracia, M; Razquin, C; Paz-Graniel, I; Guillem, P; Zomeño, MD; Moñino, M; Oncina-Canovas, A; Salaverria-Lete, I; Toledo, E; Salas-Salvadó, J; Schröder, H; Tinahones, FJ, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Muñoz-Garach, A; Cornejo-Pareja, I; Martínez-Gonzalez, MA; Bulló, M; Corella, D; Castañer, O; Romaguera, D; Vioque, J; Alonso-Gómez, AM; Wärnberg, J; Martínez, JA; Serra-Majem, L; Estruch, R; Bernal-López, MR; Lapetra, J; Pintó, X; Tur, JA; López-Miranda, J; Bueno-Cavanillas, A; Delgado-Rodríguez, M; Matía-Martín, P; Daimiel, L; Sanchez, VM; Vidal, J; Prieto, L; Ros, E; Fernandez-Aranda, F; Camacho-Barcia, L; Ortega-Azorin, C; Soria, M; Fiol, M; Compañ-Gabucio, L; Goicolea-Guemez, L; Pérez-López, J; Goñi, N; Pérez-Cabrera, J; Sacanella, E; Fernandez-García, JC; Miró-Moriano, L; Gimenez-Gracia, M; Razquin, C; Paz-Graniel, I; Guillem, P; Zomeño, MD; Moñino, M; Oncina-Canovas, A; Salaverria-Lete, I; Toledo, E; Salas-Salvadó, J; Schröder, H; Tinahones, FJ
- Abstract
Scope To examine the association between milk and dairy products intake and the prevalence of cognitive decline among Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular risk. Methods and results Cross-sectional analyses are performed on baseline data from 6744 adults (aged 55-75 years old). Intake of milk and dairy products is estimated using a food frequency questionnaire grouped into quartiles. The risk of developing cognitive impairment is based on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). A higher prevalence of cognitive decline was found in subjects who consumed more grams. Patients with worse MMSE score (10-24) consumed a mean of 395.14 +/- 12.21 g, while patients with better MMSE score (27-30) consumed a mean of 341.23 +/- 2.73 g (p < 0.05). Those subjects with the lower milk consumption (<220 g/day) had a higher MMSE score (28.35 +/- 0.045). Higher intake of fermented dairy products was observed in participants with a lower MMSE score (OR 1.340, p = 0.003). A positive correlation was found between the consumption of whole milk and the MMSE score (r = 0.066, p < 0.001). Conclusions These findings suggest that greater consumption of milk and dairy products could be associated with greater cognitive decline according to MMSE. Conversely, consumption of whole-fat milk could be linked with less cognitive impairment in the cross-sectional study.
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- 2021
6. Longitudinal changes in Mediterranean diet and transition between different obesity phenotypes
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Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Konieczna J; Yañez A; Moñino M; Babio N; Toledo E; Martínez-González MA; Sorlí JV; Salas-Salvadó J; Estruch R; Ros E; Alonso-Gómez A; Schröder H; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Pintó X; Gutiérrez-Bedmar M; Díaz-López A; González JI; Fitó M; Forga L; Fiol M; Romaguera D, Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Konieczna J; Yañez A; Moñino M; Babio N; Toledo E; Martínez-González MA; Sorlí JV; Salas-Salvadó J; Estruch R; Ros E; Alonso-Gómez A; Schröder H; Lapetra J; Serra-Majem L; Pintó X; Gutiérrez-Bedmar M; Díaz-López A; González JI; Fitó M; Forga L; Fiol M; Romaguera D
- Abstract
© 2019 Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism Background & aims: Little is known about the impact of specific dietary patterns on the development of obesity phenotypes. We aimed to determine the association of longitudinal changes in adherence to the traditional Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) with the transition between different obesity phenotypes. Methods: Data of 5801 older men and women at high cardiovascular risk from PREDIMED trial were used. Adherence to MedDiet was measured with the validated 14p-Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener (MEDAS). Using the simultaneous combination of metabolic health- and body size-related parameters participants were categorized into one of four phenotypes: metabolically healthy and abnormal obese (MHO and MAO), metabolically healthy and abnormal non-obese (MHNO and MANO). Cox regression models with yearly repeated measures during 5-year of follow-up were built with use of Markov chain assumption. Results: Each 2-point increase in MEDAS was associated with the following transitions: in MAO participants, with a 16% (95% CI 3–31%) greater likelihood of becoming MHO; in MHO participants with a 14% (3–23%) lower risk of becoming MAO; in MHNO participants with a 18% (5–30%) lower risk of becoming MHO. In MANO women, but not in men, MEDAS was associated with 20% (5–38%) greater likely of becoming MHNO (p for interaction by gender 0.014). No other significant associations were observed. Conclusions: Better adherence to the traditional MedDiet is associated with transitions to healthier phenotypes, promoting metabolic health improvement in MAO, MANO (only in women), and MHO, as well as protecting against obesity incidence in MHNO subjects.
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- 2020
7. Longitudinal changes in Mediterranean diet and transition between different obesity phenotypes
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Konieczna, J., primary, Yañez, A., additional, Moñino, M., additional, Babio, N., additional, Toledo, E., additional, Martínez-González, M.A., additional, Sorlí, J.V., additional, Salas-Salvadó, J., additional, Estruch, R., additional, Ros, E., additional, Alonso-Gómez, A., additional, Schröder, H., additional, Lapetra, J., additional, Serra-Majem, Ll, additional, Pintó, X., additional, Gutiérrez-Bedmar, M., additional, Díaz-López, A., additional, González, J.I., additional, Fitó, M., additional, Forga, L., additional, Fiol, M., additional, and Romaguera, D., additional
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- 2020
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8. Dietary Diversity and Nutritional Adequacy among an Older Spanish Population with Metabolic Syndrome in the PREDIMED-Plus Study: A Cross-Sectional Analysis.
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Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Cano-Ibáñez N, Gea A, Martínez-González MA, Salas-Salvadó J, Corella D, Zomeño MD, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Aros F, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, García-Ríos A, Riquelme-Gallego B, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía P, Daimiel L, Martín V, Vidal J, Vázquez C, Ros E, Buil-Cosiales P, Díaz-López A, Fernández-Carrión R, Fitó M, Konieczna J, Notario-Barandiaran L, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Contreras-Fernández E, Abete I, Sánchez-Villegas A, Casas R, Muñoz-Garach A, Santos-Lozano JM, Gallardo-Alfaro L, Basora J, Portoles O, Muñoz MÁ, Moñino M, Miralles Gisbert S, Moreno Rodríguez A, Ruiz-Canela M, Palau Galindo A, Pérez-Vega KA, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Bioquímica i Biotecnologia, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and Cano-Ibáñez N, Gea A, Martínez-González MA, Salas-Salvadó J, Corella D, Zomeño MD, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Aros F, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, García-Ríos A, Riquelme-Gallego B, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía P, Daimiel L, Martín V, Vidal J, Vázquez C, Ros E, Buil-Cosiales P, Díaz-López A, Fernández-Carrión R, Fitó M, Konieczna J, Notario-Barandiaran L, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Contreras-Fernández E, Abete I, Sánchez-Villegas A, Casas R, Muñoz-Garach A, Santos-Lozano JM, Gallardo-Alfaro L, Basora J, Portoles O, Muñoz MÁ, Moñino M, Miralles Gisbert S, Moreno Rodríguez A, Ruiz-Canela M, Palau Galindo A, Pérez-Vega KA, Bueno-Cavanillas A
- Abstract
Dietary guidelines emphasize the importance of a varied diet to provide an adequate nutrient intake. However, an older age is often associated with consumption of monotonous diets that can be nutritionally inadequate, increasing the risk for the development or progression of diet-related chronic diseases, such as metabolic syndrome (MetS). To assess the association between dietary diversity (DD) and nutrient intake adequacy and to identify demographic variables associated with DD, we cross-sectionally analyzed baseline data from the PREDIMED-Plus trial: 6587 Spanish adults aged 55-75 years, with overweight/obesity who also had MetS. An energy-adjusted dietary diversity score (DDS) was calculated using a 143-item validated semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). Nutrient inadequacy was defined as an intake below 2/3 of the dietary reference intake (DRI) forat least four of 17 nutrients proposed by the Institute of Medicine (IOM). Logistic regression models were used to evaluate the association between DDS and the risk of nutritionally inadequate intakes. In the higher DDS quartile there were more women and less current smokers. Compared with subjects in the highest DDS quartile, those in the lowest DDS quartile had a higher risk of inadequate nutrient intake: odds ratio (OR) = 28.56 (95% confidence interval (CI) 20.80-39.21). When we estimated food varietyfor each of the food groups, participants in the lowest quartile had a higher risk of inadequate nutrient intake for the groups of vegetables, OR = 14.03 (95% CI 10.55-18.65), fruits OR = 11.62 (95% CI 6.81-19.81), dairy products OR = 6.54 (95% CI 4.64-9.22) and protein foods OR = 6.60 (95% CI 1.96-22.24). As DDS decreased, the risk of inadequate nutrients intake rose. Given the impact of nutrient intake a
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- 2019
9. Legume consumption is inversely associated with type 2 diabetes incidence in adults: A prospective assessment from the PREDIMED study
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Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, Díaz-López, A., Rosique-Esteban, N., Ros, E., Buil-Cosiales, P., Corella, D., Estruch, R., Fitó, Montserrat, Serra-Majem, L., Arós, F., Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa M., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Loma-Osorio, A., Gómez-Gracia, Enrique, Wärnberg, J., Duaso, I., Rovira, M.A., Benítez Pont, R., Perona, Javier S., Bianchi Alba, M., de la Cruz, E., Basora, J., Brau, A., Salas-Salvadó, J., Bonet, M.T., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Guillén, M., Martínez-González, J., Berrade, N., Molina, C., Casas, Ricard, Sáez, G., Guasch-Ferré, Marta, Iglesias, C., Serra-Mir, M., Velasco García, V., Márquez, F., Montero Romero, Emilio, Vila, J., García-García, M., del Hierro, T., Coltell, O., Jurado-Ruíz, Enrique, Cabré, J.J., Romaguera, D., Valero-Barceló, C., García, M., Costa-Vizcaino, J., Altirriba, J., Prieto, R., García-Valdueza, M., Frontera, G., Fiol, F., Ginard, M., Mestres, G., García, Y., Jover, A., Sorlí, M., Ibarrola-Jurado, Nuria, Molina, N., García, J., Salas-Huetos, A., López-Sabater, M.C., Martínez-Lapiscina, E.H., García Pastor, J.A., Sánchez Luque, J.J., González, J.I., Martín, F., Manzano, E., Fanlo-Maresma, M., Viñas, C., Sáiz, C., Galera, A., Churio-Beraza, B., Trias, F., Bestard, F., Extremera-Urabayen, V., de la Torre, Rafael, Medina-Remón, Alexander, Tort, N., Tello, S., Papandreou, C., Verdú, J.M., Sarasa, I., Muñoz-Aguayo, Daniel, Baby, P., Baena, J.M., Paris, F., Ramos, A., Díaz-Benítez, E.M., Francisco, S., Mengual, L., Ruiz-Canela, M., Roura, P., de Diego Salas, J., Castro Dorado, Antonio, Goñi, E., Fernández-Carrión, R., Fernández-Ballart, J., Yuste, M.C., Aldamiz-Echevarría, M., Alonso-Gómez, A.M., Berjón, J., Sanjulián, B., Montañes, D., Forga, L., Schröder, H., Marrugat, J., Llauradó, M., Giménez, F.J., Gallego, J., Vázquez, Z., García-Layana, A., Moñino, M., Larrauri, A., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, A., Guillem-Saiz, P., Eguaras, S., Simón, C., Oller, M., Salaverria, I., Quinzavos, L., Quifer-Rada, P., Parra, L., de Juan, C., Sarmiento de la Fe, F., Liroz, M., Benavent, J., Castellote-Bargalló, Ana I., Farré, M., Baca Osorio, A., Arroyo-Azpa, C., Altés, A., Clos, J., Cofán, M., Valls-Pedret, C., Sala-Vila, A., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Doménech, M., Portolés, Olga, Algorta, J., Pérez-Cabrera, J., Bulló, M., Gil Zarzosa, J., Babio, N., Corbella, Emili, Maestre, E., Munuera, S., Sanz, E., García-Pérez, L., Pedret, R., Isach, A., Vivó, M., Basells, J., Guarner, A., Vizcaino, J., Martín, M. T., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., Castañer, O., Rekondo, J., Díaz-González, B.V., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Valentina, Carrasco, P., Segarra, R., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Ortega-Azorín, Carolina, Fiol, Miquel, Asensio, E.M., Martínez, P., Tur, J.A., Osma, R., Castillo Anzalas, J.M., Barragán, R., Portu-Zapirain, J., Alonso-Gómez, A., Corbella, X., Coll, L., González-Monje, I., Francés, F., Quiles, L., Pascual, V., Riera, C., Sosa-Also, R.E., Vargas López, E., Pages, M.A., Casañas-Quintana, L.T., Sánchez-Villegas, A., Pérez-Heras, A., Godoy, D., Cabezas, C., Carratalá-Calvo, A., Pla, I., Sánchez-Navarro, S., Boj, J., Santamaría, M.I., Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada, Proenza, A., Martí, A., Toledo, E., Mata, M., González, R., SerranoMartínez, M., Sánchez, M.S., Díez-Espino, Javier, Santos-Lozano, J.M., Munar, J.A., Timiraus-Fernández, J., García, L., Villanueva-Tellería, J., García-Arellano, A., Cortés-Ugalde, F., Sagredo-Arce, T., Medina-Ponce, J., Vigata-López, M.D., Elosua, R., García Roselló, J., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Amat, J., Urtasun-Samper, A., Frigola, J., Ruano-Rodríguez, C., Amorós, M., Portillo, María P., Flores-Mateo, Gemma, Belló, M.C., Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, Díaz-López, A., Rosique-Esteban, N., Ros, E., Buil-Cosiales, P., Corella, D., Estruch, R., Fitó, Montserrat, Serra-Majem, L., Arós, F., Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa M., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Loma-Osorio, A., Gómez-Gracia, Enrique, Wärnberg, J., Duaso, I., Rovira, M.A., Benítez Pont, R., Perona, Javier S., Bianchi Alba, M., de la Cruz, E., Basora, J., Brau, A., Salas-Salvadó, J., Bonet, M.T., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Guillén, M., Martínez-González, J., Berrade, N., Molina, C., Casas, Ricard, Sáez, G., Guasch-Ferré, Marta, Iglesias, C., Serra-Mir, M., Velasco García, V., Márquez, F., Montero Romero, Emilio, Vila, J., García-García, M., del Hierro, T., Coltell, O., Jurado-Ruíz, Enrique, Cabré, J.J., Romaguera, D., Valero-Barceló, C., García, M., Costa-Vizcaino, J., Altirriba, J., Prieto, R., García-Valdueza, M., Frontera, G., Fiol, F., Ginard, M., Mestres, G., García, Y., Jover, A., Sorlí, M., Ibarrola-Jurado, Nuria, Molina, N., García, J., Salas-Huetos, A., López-Sabater, M.C., Martínez-Lapiscina, E.H., García Pastor, J.A., Sánchez Luque, J.J., González, J.I., Martín, F., Manzano, E., Fanlo-Maresma, M., Viñas, C., Sáiz, C., Galera, A., Churio-Beraza, B., Trias, F., Bestard, F., Extremera-Urabayen, V., de la Torre, Rafael, Medina-Remón, Alexander, Tort, N., Tello, S., Papandreou, C., Verdú, J.M., Sarasa, I., Muñoz-Aguayo, Daniel, Baby, P., Baena, J.M., Paris, F., Ramos, A., Díaz-Benítez, E.M., Francisco, S., Mengual, L., Ruiz-Canela, M., Roura, P., de Diego Salas, J., Castro Dorado, Antonio, Goñi, E., Fernández-Carrión, R., Fernández-Ballart, J., Yuste, M.C., Aldamiz-Echevarría, M., Alonso-Gómez, A.M., Berjón, J., Sanjulián, B., Montañes, D., Forga, L., Schröder, H., Marrugat, J., Llauradó, M., Giménez, F.J., Gallego, J., Vázquez, Z., García-Layana, A., Moñino, M., Larrauri, A., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, A., Guillem-Saiz, P., Eguaras, S., Simón, C., Oller, M., Salaverria, I., Quinzavos, L., Quifer-Rada, P., Parra, L., de Juan, C., Sarmiento de la Fe, F., Liroz, M., Benavent, J., Castellote-Bargalló, Ana I., Farré, M., Baca Osorio, A., Arroyo-Azpa, C., Altés, A., Clos, J., Cofán, M., Valls-Pedret, C., Sala-Vila, A., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Doménech, M., Portolés, Olga, Algorta, J., Pérez-Cabrera, J., Bulló, M., Gil Zarzosa, J., Babio, N., Corbella, Emili, Maestre, E., Munuera, S., Sanz, E., García-Pérez, L., Pedret, R., Isach, A., Vivó, M., Basells, J., Guarner, A., Vizcaino, J., Martín, M. T., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., Castañer, O., Rekondo, J., Díaz-González, B.V., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Valentina, Carrasco, P., Segarra, R., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Ortega-Azorín, Carolina, Fiol, Miquel, Asensio, E.M., Martínez, P., Tur, J.A., Osma, R., Castillo Anzalas, J.M., Barragán, R., Portu-Zapirain, J., Alonso-Gómez, A., Corbella, X., Coll, L., González-Monje, I., Francés, F., Quiles, L., Pascual, V., Riera, C., Sosa-Also, R.E., Vargas López, E., Pages, M.A., Casañas-Quintana, L.T., Sánchez-Villegas, A., Pérez-Heras, A., Godoy, D., Cabezas, C., Carratalá-Calvo, A., Pla, I., Sánchez-Navarro, S., Boj, J., Santamaría, M.I., Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada, Proenza, A., Martí, A., Toledo, E., Mata, M., González, R., SerranoMartínez, M., Sánchez, M.S., Díez-Espino, Javier, Santos-Lozano, J.M., Munar, J.A., Timiraus-Fernández, J., García, L., Villanueva-Tellería, J., García-Arellano, A., Cortés-Ugalde, F., Sagredo-Arce, T., Medina-Ponce, J., Vigata-López, M.D., Elosua, R., García Roselló, J., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Amat, J., Urtasun-Samper, A., Frigola, J., Ruano-Rodríguez, C., Amorós, M., Portillo, María P., Flores-Mateo, Gemma, and Belló, M.C.
- Abstract
Background & aims: Legumes, a low-energy, nutrient-dense and low glycemic index food, have shown beneficial effects on glycemic control and adiposity. As such, legumes are widely recommended in diabetic diets, even though there is little evidence that their consumption protects against type 2 diabetes. Therefore the aim of the present study was to examine the associations between consumption of total legumes and specific subtypes, and type 2 diabetes risk. We also investigated the effect of theoretically substituting legumes for other protein- or carbohydrate-rich foods. Methods: Prospective assessment of 3349 participants in the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) study without type 2 diabetes at baseline. Dietary information was assessed at baseline and yearly during follow-up. We used Cox regression models to estimate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for type-2 diabetes incidence according to quartiles of cumulative average consumption of total legumes, lentils, chickpeas, dry beans and fresh peas. Results: During a median follow-up of 4.3 years, 266 new cases of type 2 diabetes occurred. Individuals in the highest quartile of total legume and lentil consumption had a lower risk of diabetes than those in the lowest quartile (HR: 0.65; 95% CI: 0.43, 0.96; P-trend = 0.04; and HR: 0.67; 95% CI: 0.46–0.98; P-trend = 0.05, respectively). A borderline significant association was also observed for chickpeas consumption (HR 0.68; 95% CI: 0.46, 1.00; P-trend = 0.06). Substitutions of half a serving/day of legumes for similar servings of eggs, bread, rice or baked potato was associated with lower risk of diabetes incidence. Conclusions: A frequent consumption of legumes, particularly lentils, in the context of a Mediterranean diet, may provide benefits on type 2 diabetes prevention in older adults at high cardiovascular risk. Trial registration: The trial is registered at http://www.controlled-trials.com (ISRCTN35739639). Registration dat
- Published
- 2018
10. Legume consumption is inversely associated with type 2 diabetes incidence in adults: A prospective assessment from the PREDIMED study
- Author
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Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, primary, Díaz-López, Andrés, additional, Rosique-Esteban, Núria, additional, Ros, Emilio, additional, Buil-Cosiales, Pilar, additional, Corella, Dolores, additional, Estruch, Ramon, additional, Fitó, Montserrat, additional, Serra-Majem, Lluís, additional, Arós, Fernando, additional, Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa Maria, additional, Fiol, Miquel, additional, Santos-Lozano, José Manuel, additional, Díez-Espino, Javier, additional, Portoles, Olga, additional, Salas-Salvadó, Jordi, additional, Serra-Mir, M., additional, Pérez-Heras, A., additional, Viñas, C., additional, Casas, R., additional, Medina-Renom, A., additional, Baena, J.M., additional, García, M., additional, Oller, M., additional, Amat, J., additional, Duaso, I., additional, García, Y., additional, Iglesias, C., additional, Simón, C., additional, Quinzavos, L., additional, Parra, L., additional, Liroz, M., additional, Benavent, J., additional, Clos, J., additional, Pla, I., additional, Amorós, M., additional, Bonet, M.T., additional, Martín, M.T., additional, Sánchez, M.S., additional, Altirriba, J., additional, Manzano, E., additional, Altés, A., additional, Cofán, M., additional, Valls-Pedret, C., additional, Sala-Vila, A., additional, Doménech, M., additional, Bulló, M., additional, Babio, N., additional, Basora, J., additional, González, R., additional, Molina, C., additional, Márquez, F., additional, Martínez, P., additional, Ibarrola, N., additional, Sorlí, M., additional, García Roselló, J., additional, Castro, A., additional, Martin, F., additional, Tort, N., additional, Isach, A., additional, Guasch-Ferre, M., additional, Cabré, J.J., additional, Mestres, G., additional, Paris, F., additional, Llauradó, M., additional, Pedret, R., additional, Basells, J., additional, Vizcaino, J., additional, Segarra, R., additional, Frigola, J., additional, Costa-Vizcaino, J., additional, Salas-Huetos, A., additional, Boj, J., additional, Montañes, D., additional, Papandreou, Christopher, additional, Fernández-Ballart, J., additional, Carrasco, P., additional, Ortega-Azorín, C., additional, Asensio, E.M., additional, Osma, R., additional, Barragán, R., additional, Francés, F., additional, Guillén, M., additional, González, J.I., additional, Sáiz, C., additional, Portolés, O., additional, Giménez, F.J., additional, Coltell, O., additional, Fernández-Carrión, R., additional, Guillem-Sáiz, P., additional, González-Monje, I., additional, Quiles, L., additional, Pascual, V., additional, Riera, C., additional, Pages, M.A., additional, Godoy, D., additional, Carratalá-Calvo, A., additional, Sánchez-Navarro, S., additional, Valero-Barceló, C., additional, Tello, S., additional, Vila, J., additional, de la Torre, R., additional, Muñoz-Aguayo, D., additional, Elosua, R., additional, Marrugat, J., additional, Schröder, H., additional, Molina, N., additional, Maestre, E., additional, Rovira, A., additional, Castañer, O., additional, Farré, M., additional, Toledo, E., additional, Ruiz-Canela, M., additional, Sanjulián, B., additional, Sánchez-Tainta, A., additional, Eguaras, S., additional, Martí, A., additional, Buil-Cosiales, P., additional, SerranoMartínez, M., additional, Diez-Espino, J., additional, García-Arellano, A., additional, Martínez-Lapiscina, E.H., additional, Goñi, E., additional, Vázquez, Z., additional, Berrade, N., additional, Extremera-Urabayen, V., additional, Arroyo-Azpa, C., additional, García-Pérez, L., additional, Villanueva-Telleria, J., additional, Cortés-Ugalde, F., additional, Sagredo-Arce, T., additional, Vigata-López, M.D., additional, Arceiz Campo, M.T., additional, Urtasun-Samper, A., additional, Gueto Rubio, M.V., additional, Churio-Beraza, B., additional, Arós, F., additional, Salaverria, I., additional, del Hierro, T., additional, Algorta, J., additional, Francisco, S., additional, Alonso-Gómez, A., additional, Sanz, E., additional, Rekondo, J., additional, Belló, M.C., additional, Loma-Osorio, A., additional, Gómez-Gracia, E., additional, Wärnberg, J., additional, Benítez Pont, R., additional, Bianchi Alba, M., additional, Gómez-Huelgas, R., additional, Martínez-González, J., additional, Velasco García, V., additional, de Diego Salas, J., additional, Baca Osorio, A., additional, Gil Zarzosa, J., additional, Sánchez Luque, J.J., additional, Vargas López, E., additional, Ruiz-Gutiérrez, V., additional, Sánchez Perona, J., additional, Montero Romero, E., additional, García-García, M., additional, Jurado-Ruiz, E., additional, Fiol, M., additional, Romaguera, D., additional, García-Valdueza, M., additional, Moñino, M., additional, Munuera, S., additional, Vivó, M., additional, Bestard, F., additional, Munar, J.A., additional, Coll, L., additional, Proenza, A., additional, Prieto, R., additional, Frontera, G., additional, Fiol, F., additional, Ginard, M., additional, Jover, A., additional, García, J., additional, Santos-Lozano, J.M., additional, Ortega-Calvo, M., additional, Mellado, L., additional, García-Corte, F.J., additional, Román, P., additional, Iglesias, P., additional, Corchado, Y., additional, Miró-Moriano, L., additional, Domínguez-Espinaco, C., additional, Lozano-Rodriguez, J.M., additional, Vaquero-Diaz, S., additional, López- Sabater, M.C., additional, Castellote-Bargalló, A.I., additional, Quifer-Rada, P., additional, Tresserra-Rimbau, A., additional, Álvarez-Pérez, J., additional, Díaz-Benítez, E.M., additional, Sánchez-Villegas, A., additional, Casañas-Quintana, L.T., additional, Pérez-Cabrera, J., additional, Ruano-Rodríguez, C., additional, Bautista-Castaño, I., additional, Sarmiento de la Fe, F., additional, García Pastor, J.A., additional, Díaz-González, B.V., additional, Castillo Anzalas, J.M., additional, Sosa-Also, R.E., additional, Medina-Ponce, J., additional, de la Cruz, E., additional, Fanlo-Maresma, M., additional, Galera, A., additional, Trias, F., additional, Sarasa, I., additional, Corbella, E., additional, Corbella, X., additional, Cabezas, C., additional, Vinyoles, E., additional, Rovira, M.A., additional, García, L., additional, Flores, G., additional, Verdú, J.M., additional, Baby, P., additional, Ramos, A., additional, Mengual, L., additional, Roura, P., additional, Yuste, M.C., additional, Guarner, A., additional, Santamaría, M.I., additional, Mata, M., additional, de Juan, C., additional, Brau, A., additional, Tur, J.A., additional, Portillo, M.P., additional, Sáez, G., additional, Aldamiz-Echevarría, M., additional, Alonso-Gómez, A.M., additional, Berjón, J., additional, Forga, L., additional, Gállego, J., additional, García-Layana, A., additional, Larrauri, A., additional, Portu-Zapirain, J., additional, and Timiraus-Fernández, J., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Prediction of cardiovascular disease by the framingham-REGICOR equation in the high-risk PREDIMED cohort: Impact of the mediterranean diet across different risk strata
- Author
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Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), California Walnut Commission, Amor, A.J., Serra-Mir, M., Martínez-González, M.A., Corella, D., Salas-Salvadó, J., Fitó, Montserrat, Estruch, R., Serra-Majem, L., Arós, F., Babio, N., Ros, E., Cofán, M., Lecea, O., Rosique Esteban, N., Valls-Pedret, C., Freitas-Simoes, T.M., Doménech, M., Gilabert, R., Sagredo Arce, T., Bertolín-Muñoz, A., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., Jurado-Ruíz, Enrique, Salaverría, I., Pages, M.A., Cabré, J.J., Mestres, G., Paris, F., Llauradó, M., Pedret, R., Basells, J., Vizcaino, J., Segarra, R., Sacanella, E., Casas, Ricard, Frontera, G., Alonso-Gómez, A., Godoy, D., López-Sabater, M.C., de la Torre, Rafael, del Hierro, T., Hernandez-Alonso, P., Giardina, S., Ferreira-Pego, C., Pérez-Cabrera, J., Papandreou, C., Baby, P., Camacho, L., Toledo, E., Casanas Quintana, T., Carratalá-Calvo, A., Buil-Cosiales, P., Rovira, A., Ruiz-Canela, M., Martínez, J. Alfredo, Fiol, Miquel, Castellote-Bargalló, Ana I., Algorta, J., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Sanjulian, B., Ortega, E., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Díez-Espino, Javier, Sánchez-Villegas, A., Ginard, M., Fiol, F., García-Valdueza, M., Marrugat, J., Schröder, H., Molina, N., Maestre, E., Castañer, O., Farré, M., Sorli, J.V., Ramos, A., García, J., Moñino, M., Santamaría, M.I., Fernández-Rodríguez, M. J., Jover, A., Pérez-Heras, A., Zanon-Moreno, V., Díaz-Benítez, E.M., Carrasco, P., Ortega-Azorín, Carolina, Asensio, E.M., Oller, M., Proenza, A., Osma, R., Bargalló, N., Barragán, R., Francés, F., García, M., Romaguera, D., Guillén, M., Márquez, F., González, J.I., Saiz, C., Portillo, María P., Mengual, L., Viñas, C., Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada, de Santamaría, L., Portolés, Olga, Giménez, F.J., Coltell, O., Guillem-Saiz, P., Chiva, G., Mata, M., Sorli, M., de Juan, C., Roura, P., Rekondo, J., Belló, M.C., Loma-Osorio, A., Gómez-Gracia, Enrique, Warnberg, J., Benítez Pont, R., Bianchi Alba, M., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Bulló, M., Sáez, G., Yuste, M.C., Martínez, P., Valderas, P., Brau, A., Martínez-González, J., Velasco García, V., Romero, S., de Diego Salas, J., Razquin, C., Baca Osorio, A., Gil Zarzosa, J., Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, Guarner, A., Sánchez Luque, J.J., Eguaras, S., Vargas López, E., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Valentina, Ibarrola-Jurado, Nuria, Tur, J.A., García Roselló, J., Perona, Javier S., Vigata López, M.D., Montero Romero, Emilio, García-García, M., Isach, A., Basora, J., González, R., Nissensohn, M., Díaz-González, V., Ruano-Rodríguez, C., Ortiz-Andrelluchi, A.P., Macías Gutiérrez, B., Santana-Santana, A.J., Pintó, Xavier, de la Cruz, E., García-Arellano, A., Mena, G., Marti, A., Salas-Huetos, A., Díaz-López, A., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Arranz, S., Martín, F., Galera, A., Soler, Y., Trias, F., Elosua, R., Sarasa, I., Quiles, L., Padres, E., Corbella, Emili, Muñoz-Aguayo, Daniel, Molina, C., Cabezas, C., Martín-Rillo, M.J., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, M.A., Goñi, E., Urtasun Samper, A., Tort, N., Sola, A., García, L., Baena, J.M., Flores, G., Verdú, J.M., Tello, S., Arroyo-Azpa, C., García-Pérez, L., Vazquez, Z., Amat, J., Duaso, I., García, Y., Iglesias, C., Simón, C., Quinzavos, L., Parra, L., Liroz, M., Pascual, V., García de la Noceda Montoy, M.D., Berrade, N., Llopis-Osorio, E., Vila, J., Villanueva Telleria, J., Benavent, J., Clos, J., Pla, I., Amorós, M., Bonet, M.T., Sanz, E., Extremera-Urabayen, V., Martín, M. T., Prieto, R., Sánchez, M.S., Altirriba, J., Ruiz-Baixauli, J., Cortés Ugalde, F., Manzano, E., Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa M., Altés, A., Sala-Vila, A., Francisco, S., Riera, C., Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (España), Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), California Walnut Commission, Amor, A.J., Serra-Mir, M., Martínez-González, M.A., Corella, D., Salas-Salvadó, J., Fitó, Montserrat, Estruch, R., Serra-Majem, L., Arós, F., Babio, N., Ros, E., Cofán, M., Lecea, O., Rosique Esteban, N., Valls-Pedret, C., Freitas-Simoes, T.M., Doménech, M., Gilabert, R., Sagredo Arce, T., Bertolín-Muñoz, A., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., Jurado-Ruíz, Enrique, Salaverría, I., Pages, M.A., Cabré, J.J., Mestres, G., Paris, F., Llauradó, M., Pedret, R., Basells, J., Vizcaino, J., Segarra, R., Sacanella, E., Casas, Ricard, Frontera, G., Alonso-Gómez, A., Godoy, D., López-Sabater, M.C., de la Torre, Rafael, del Hierro, T., Hernandez-Alonso, P., Giardina, S., Ferreira-Pego, C., Pérez-Cabrera, J., Papandreou, C., Baby, P., Camacho, L., Toledo, E., Casanas Quintana, T., Carratalá-Calvo, A., Buil-Cosiales, P., Rovira, A., Ruiz-Canela, M., Martínez, J. Alfredo, Fiol, Miquel, Castellote-Bargalló, Ana I., Algorta, J., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Sanjulian, B., Ortega, E., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Díez-Espino, Javier, Sánchez-Villegas, A., Ginard, M., Fiol, F., García-Valdueza, M., Marrugat, J., Schröder, H., Molina, N., Maestre, E., Castañer, O., Farré, M., Sorli, J.V., Ramos, A., García, J., Moñino, M., Santamaría, M.I., Fernández-Rodríguez, M. J., Jover, A., Pérez-Heras, A., Zanon-Moreno, V., Díaz-Benítez, E.M., Carrasco, P., Ortega-Azorín, Carolina, Asensio, E.M., Oller, M., Proenza, A., Osma, R., Bargalló, N., Barragán, R., Francés, F., García, M., Romaguera, D., Guillén, M., Márquez, F., González, J.I., Saiz, C., Portillo, María P., Mengual, L., Viñas, C., Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada, de Santamaría, L., Portolés, Olga, Giménez, F.J., Coltell, O., Guillem-Saiz, P., Chiva, G., Mata, M., Sorli, M., de Juan, C., Roura, P., Rekondo, J., Belló, M.C., Loma-Osorio, A., Gómez-Gracia, Enrique, Warnberg, J., Benítez Pont, R., Bianchi Alba, M., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Bulló, M., Sáez, G., Yuste, M.C., Martínez, P., Valderas, P., Brau, A., Martínez-González, J., Velasco García, V., Romero, S., de Diego Salas, J., Razquin, C., Baca Osorio, A., Gil Zarzosa, J., Becerra-Tomás, Nerea, Guarner, A., Sánchez Luque, J.J., Eguaras, S., Vargas López, E., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Valentina, Ibarrola-Jurado, Nuria, Tur, J.A., García Roselló, J., Perona, Javier S., Vigata López, M.D., Montero Romero, Emilio, García-García, M., Isach, A., Basora, J., González, R., Nissensohn, M., Díaz-González, V., Ruano-Rodríguez, C., Ortiz-Andrelluchi, A.P., Macías Gutiérrez, B., Santana-Santana, A.J., Pintó, Xavier, de la Cruz, E., García-Arellano, A., Mena, G., Marti, A., Salas-Huetos, A., Díaz-López, A., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Arranz, S., Martín, F., Galera, A., Soler, Y., Trias, F., Elosua, R., Sarasa, I., Quiles, L., Padres, E., Corbella, Emili, Muñoz-Aguayo, Daniel, Molina, C., Cabezas, C., Martín-Rillo, M.J., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, M.A., Goñi, E., Urtasun Samper, A., Tort, N., Sola, A., García, L., Baena, J.M., Flores, G., Verdú, J.M., Tello, S., Arroyo-Azpa, C., García-Pérez, L., Vazquez, Z., Amat, J., Duaso, I., García, Y., Iglesias, C., Simón, C., Quinzavos, L., Parra, L., Liroz, M., Pascual, V., García de la Noceda Montoy, M.D., Berrade, N., Llopis-Osorio, E., Vila, J., Villanueva Telleria, J., Benavent, J., Clos, J., Pla, I., Amorós, M., Bonet, M.T., Sanz, E., Extremera-Urabayen, V., Martín, M. T., Prieto, R., Sánchez, M.S., Altirriba, J., Ruiz-Baixauli, J., Cortés Ugalde, F., Manzano, E., Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa M., Altés, A., Sala-Vila, A., Francisco, S., and Riera, C.
- Abstract
Background-The usefulness of cardiovascular disease (CVD) predictive equations in different populations is debatable. We assessed the efficacy of the Framingham-REGICOR scale, validated for the Spanish population, to identify future CVD in participants, who were predefined as being at high-risk in the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) study-a nutrition-intervention primary prevention trial-and the impact of adherence to the Mediterranean diet on CVD across risk categories. Methods and Results-In a post hoc analysis, we assessed the CVD predictive value of baseline estimated risk in 5966 PREDIMED participants (aged 55-74 years, 57% women; 48% with type 2 diabetes mellitus). Major CVD events, the primary PREDIMED end point, were an aggregate of myocardial infarction, stroke, and cardiovascular death. Multivariate-adjusted Cox regression was used to calculate hazard ratios for major CVD events and effect modification from the Mediterranean diet intervention across risk strata (low, moderate, high, very high). The Framingham-REGICOR classification of PREDIMED participants was 25.1% low risk, 44.5% moderate risk, and 30.4% high or very high risk. During 6-year follow-up, 188 major CVD events occurred. Hazard ratios for major CVD events increased in parallel with estimated risk (2.68, 4.24, and 6.60 for moderate, high, and very high risk), particularly in men (7.60, 13.16, and 15.85, respectively, versus 2.16, 2.28, and 3.51, respectively, in women). Yet among those with low or moderate risk, 32.2% and 74.3% of major CVD events occurred in men and women, respectively. Mediterranean diet adherence was associated with CVD risk reduction regardless of risk strata (P > 0.4 for interaction). Conclusions-Incident CVD increased in parallel with estimated risk in the PREDIMED cohort, but most events occurred in non- high-risk categories, particularly in women. Until predictive tools are improved, promotion of the Mediterranean diet might be useful to reduce CVD indepen
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- 2017
12. Manuscritos literarios peruanos en la biblioteca de Solórzano Pereira
- Author
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RODRIGUEZ-MOÑINO, M.
- Published
- 1966
13. Prediction of Cardiovascular Disease by the Framingham‐REGICOR Equation in the High‐Risk PREDIMED Cohort: Impact of the Mediterranean Diet Across Different Risk Strata
- Author
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Amor, Antonio J., primary, Serra‐Mir, Mercè, additional, Martínez‐González, Miguel A., additional, Corella, Dolores, additional, Salas‐Salvadó, Jordi, additional, Fitó, Montserrat, additional, Estruch, Ramón, additional, Serra‐Majem, Lluis, additional, Arós, Fernando, additional, Babio, Nancy, additional, Ros, Emilio, additional, Ortega, Emilio, additional, Pérez‐Heras, A., additional, Viñas, C., additional, Casas, R., additional, de Santamaría, L., additional, Romero, S., additional, Sacanella, E., additional, Chiva, G., additional, Valderas, P., additional, Arranz, S., additional, Baena, J. M., additional, García, M., additional, Oller, M., additional, Amat, J., additional, Duaso, I., additional, García, Y., additional, Iglesias, C., additional, Simón, C., additional, Quinzavos, Ll., additional, Parra, Ll., additional, Liroz, M., additional, Benavent, J., additional, Clos, J., additional, Pla, I., additional, Amorós, M., additional, Bonet, M. T., additional, Martin, M. T., additional, Sánchez, M. S., additional, Altirriba, J., additional, Manzano, E., additional, Altés, A., additional, Sala‐Vila, A., additional, Cofán, M., additional, Valls‐Pedret, C., additional, Freitas‐Simoes, T. M., additional, Doménech, M., additional, Gilabert, R., additional, Bargalló, N., additional, Bulló, M., additional, Basora, J., additional, González, R., additional, Díaz‐López, A., additional, Molina, C., additional, Mena, G., additional, Márquez, F., additional, Martínez, P., additional, Ibarrola, N., additional, Sorli, M., additional, García Roselló, J., additional, Martín, F., additional, Tort, N., additional, Isach, A., additional, Salas‐Huetos, A., additional, Becerra‐Tomás, N., additional, Rosique Esteban, N., additional, Cabré, J. J., additional, Mestres, G., additional, Paris, F., additional, Llaurado, M., additional, Pedret, R., additional, Basells, J., additional, Vizcaino, J., additional, Segarra, R., additional, Hernandez‐Alonso, P., additional, Giardina, S., additional, Ferreira‐Pego, C., additional, Papandreou, C., additional, Camacho, L., additional, Toledo, E., additional, Buil‐Cosiales, P., additional, Ruiz‐Canela, M., additional, Martínez, J. A., additional, Sanjulian, B., additional, Sánchez‐Tainta, A., additional, Diez‐Espino, J., additional, Razquin, C., additional, Garcia‐Arellano, A., additional, Goni, E., additional, Vazquez, Z., additional, Berrade, N., additional, Extremera‐Urabayen, V., additional, Eguaras, S., additional, Marti, A., additional, Arroyo‐Azpa, C., additional, García‐Pérez, L., additional, Villanueva Telleria, J., additional, Cortés Ugalde, F., additional, Sagredo Arce, T., additional, de la Noceda Montoy, M. D. García, additional, Vigata López, M. D., additional, Arceiz Campo, M. T., additional, Urtasun Samper, A., additional, Gueto Rubio, M. V., additional, Sola, A., additional, Goñi, N., additional, Lecea, O., additional, Tello, S., additional, Vila, J., additional, de la Torre, R., additional, Muñoz‐Aguayo, D., additional, Elosua, R., additional, Marrugat, J., additional, Schröder, H., additional, Molina, N., additional, Maestre, E., additional, Castañer, O., additional, Rovira, A., additional, Farre, M., additional, Sorli, J. V., additional, Zanon‐Moreno, V., additional, Carrasco, P., additional, Ortega‐Azorín, C., additional, Asensio, E. M., additional, Osma, R., additional, Barragán, R., additional, Francés, F., additional, Guillén, M., additional, González, J. I., additional, Saiz, C., additional, Portolés, O., additional, Giménez, F. J., additional, Coltell, O., additional, Guillem‐Saiz, P., additional, Quiles, L., additional, Pascual, V., additional, Riera, C., additional, Pages, M. A., additional, Godoy, D., additional, Carratala‐Calvo, A., additional, Martín‐Rillo, M. J., additional, Llopis‐Osorio, E., additional, Ruiz‐Baixauli, J., additional, Bertolín‐Muñoz, A., additional, Salaverría, I., additional, del Hierro, T., additional, Algorta, J., additional, Francisco, S., additional, Alonso‐Gómez, A., additional, Sanz, E., additional, Rekondo, J., additional, Bello, M. C., additional, Loma‐Osorio, A., additional, Gómez‐Gracia, E., additional, Warnberg, J., additional, Benítez Pont, R., additional, Bianchi Alba, M., additional, Gómez‐Huelgas, R., additional, Martínez‐González, J., additional, Velasco García, V., additional, de Diego Salas, J., additional, Baca Osorio, A., additional, Gil Zarzosa, J., additional, Sánchez Luque, J. J., additional, Vargas López, E., additional, Ruiz‐Gutiérrez, V., additional, Sánchez Perona, J., additional, Montero Romero, E., additional, García‐García, M., additional, Jurado‐Ruiz, E., additional, Fiol, M., additional, García‐Valdueza, M., additional, Moñino, M., additional, Proenza, A., additional, Prieto, R., additional, Frontera, G., additional, Ginard, M., additional, Fiol, F., additional, Jover, A., additional, Romaguera, D., additional, García, J., additional, Lapetra, J., additional, Santos‐Lozano, J. M., additional, Ortega‐Calvo, M., additional, Mellado, L., additional, Leal, M., additional, Martínez, E., additional, José García, F., additional, Román, P., additional, Iglesias, P., additional, Corchado, Y., additional, Miró, L., additional, Domínguez, C., additional, Lozano, J. M., additional, Mayoral, E., additional, Lamuela‐Raventós, R. M., additional, López‐Sabater, M. C., additional, Castellote‐Bargallo, A. I., additional, Tresserra‐Rimbau, A., additional, Álvarez‐Pérez, J., additional, Díaz‐Benítez, E. M., additional, Bautista Castaño, I., additional, Sánchez‐Villegas, A., additional, Fernández‐Rodríguez, M. J., additional, Casanas Quintana, T., additional, Pérez‐Cabrera, J., additional, Nissensohn, M., additional, Díaz‐González, V., additional, Ruano‐Rodríguez, C., additional, Ortiz‐Andrelluchi, A. P., additional, Macías Gutiérrez, B., additional, Santana‐Santana, A. J., additional, Pintó, X., additional, de la Cruz, E., additional, Galera, A., additional, Soler, Y., additional, Trias, F., additional, Sarasa, I., additional, Padres, E., additional, Corbella, E., additional, Cabezas, C., additional, Vinyoles, E., additional, Rovira, M. A., additional, García, L., additional, Flores, G., additional, Verdú, J. M., additional, Baby, P., additional, Ramos, A., additional, Mengual, L., additional, Roura, P., additional, Yuste, M. C., additional, Guarner, A., additional, Santamaría, M. I., additional, Mata, M., additional, de Juan, C., additional, Brau, A., additional, Tur, J. A., additional, Portillo, M. P., additional, Sáez, G., additional, Aldamiz, M., additional, Alonso, A., additional, Berjón, J., additional, Forga, L., additional, Gallego, J., additional, Larrauri, A., additional, Portu, J., additional, Timiraos, J., additional, and Serrano‐Martínez, M., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Efecto de diferentes estrategias de riego en la conservación postcosecha de ciruelas cv. Angeleno
- Author
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Prieto, M. H., Moñino, M, J., Vivas, A., Alonso, Jesús, and García Bodelón, Óscar
- Subjects
Prunus salicina ,Riego deficitario controlado ,maduración ,education ,Etileno ,Respiración ,Calidad - Published
- 2015
15. Efecto de diferentes estrategias de riego en la conservación postcosecha de ciruelas cv. Angeleno
- Author
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Prieto, M. Henar, Moñino, M, J., Vivas, A., Alonso, Jesús, García Bodelón, Óscar, Prieto, M. Henar, Moñino, M, J., Vivas, A., Alonso, Jesús, and García Bodelón, Óscar
- Published
- 2015
16. Dietary α‐Linolenic Acid, Marine ω‐3 Fatty Acids, and Mortality in a Population With High Fish Consumption: Findings From the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) Study
- Author
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Sala‐Vila, Aleix, Guasch‐Ferré, Marta, Hu, Frank B., Sánchez‐Tainta, Ana, Bulló, Mònica, Serra‐Mir, Mercè, López‐Sabater, Carmen, Sorlí, Jose V., Arós, Fernando, Fiol, Miquel, Muñoz, Miguel A., Serra‐Majem, Luis, Martínez, J. Alfredo, Corella, Dolores, Fitó, Montserrat, Salas‐Salvadó, Jordi, Martínez‐González, Miguel A., Estruch, Ramón, Ros, Emilio, Pérez‐Heras, A., Viñas, C., Casas, R., de Santamaría, L., Romero, S., Sacanella, E., Chiva, G., Valderas, P., Arranz, S., Baena, J.M., García, M., Oller, M., Amat, J., Duaso, I., García, Y., Iglesias, C., Simón, C., Quinzavos, Ll., Parra, Ll., Liroz, M., Benavent, J., Clos, J., Pla, I., Amorós, M., Bonet, M.T., Martin, M.T., Sánchez, M.S., Altirriba, J., Manzano, E., Altés, A., Cofán, M., Valls‐Pedret, C., Doménech, M., Gilabert, R., Bargalló, N., González, R., Molina, C., Márquez, F., Babio, N., Sorli, M., García Roselló, J., Diaz‐López A, A., Martin, F., Tort, R., Isach, A., Costa, B., Cabré, J.J., Fernández‐Ballart, J., Ibarrola‐Jurado, N., Alegret, C., Martínez, P., Millán, S., Piñol, J.L., Basora, T., Hernández, J.M., Toledo, E., Buil‐Cosiales, P., Ruiz‐Canela, M., Sanjulián, B., Díez‐Espino, J., Extremera‐Urabayen, V., García‐Arellano, A., Zazpe, I., Basterra‐Gortari, F.J., Goñi, E, Razquin, C., Serrano‐Martínez, M., Bes‐Rastrollo, M., Gea, A., Martínez‐Lapiscina, E.H., Nuñez‐Córdoba, J.M., Arroyo‐Azpa, C., García‐Pérez, L., Villanueva‐Tellería, J., Cortés‐Ugalde, F., Sagredo‐Arce, T., García de la Noceda‐Montoy, Mª D., Vigata‐López, Mª D., Arceiz‐Campo, Mª T., Urtasun‐Samper, A., Gueto‐Rubio, Mª V., Churio‐Beraza, B., Lamuela‐Raventós, Rosa M., Castellote‐Bargallo, A.I., Medina‐Remón, A., Tresserra‐Rimbau, A., Carrasco, P., Ortega‐ Azorín, C., Asensio, E.M., Osma, R., Barragán, R., Francés, F., Guillén, M., González, J.I., Saiz, C., Portolés, O., Giménez, F.J., Coltell, O., Guillem‐Saiz, P., Quiles, L., Pascual, V., Riera, C., Pages, M.A., Godoy, D., Carratalá‐Calvo, A., Martín‐Rillo, M.J., Llopis‐Osorio, E., Ruiz‐ Baixauli, J., Bertolín‐Muñoz, A., Salaverría, I., del Hierro, T., Algorta, J., Francisco, S., Alonso, A., San Vicente, J., Sanz, E., Felipe, I., Alonso Gómez, A., Loma‐Osorio, A., García‐Valdueza, M., Moñino, M., Proenza, A., Prieto, R., Frontera, G., Ginard, M., Fiol, F., Jover, A., García, J., Covas, M.I., Tello, S., Vila, J., Schröder, H., De la Torre, R, Muñoz‐Aguayo, D., Elosúa, R., Marrugat, J., Ferrer, M., Álvarez‐Pérez, J., DíazBenítez, E., Bautista‐Castaño, I., Maldonado‐Díaz, I., Sánchez‐Villegas, A., Castro, I., Henríquez, P., Ruano, C., Ortiz, A. P., Sarmiendo de la Fe, F, Simón‐García, C., Falcón‐Sanabria, I., Macías‐Gutiérrez, B., Santana‐Santana, A.J., Gomez‐Gracia, E., Fernández‐Crehuet, J., Benítez Pont, R., Bianchi Alba, M., Wärnberg, J., Gómez‐Huelgas, R., Martínez‐González, J., Velasco García, V., de Diego Salas, J, Baca Osorio, A., Gil Zarzosa, J., Sánchez Luque, J.J., Vargas López, E., Ruiz‐Gutierrez, V., Jurado Ruiz, E., Montero Romero, E., García García, M., Lapetra, J., Leal, M., Martínez, E., Santos, J.M., Ortega‐Calvo, M., Román, P., José García, F., Iglesias, P., Corchado, Y., Mayoral, E., Lama, C., Pintó, X., de la Cruz, E, Galera, A., Soler, Y., Trias, F., Sarasa, I., Padres, E., Figueras, R., Solanich, X., Pujol, R., Corbella, E., Cabezas, C., Vinyoles, E., Rovira, M.A., García, L., Flores, G., Verdú, J.M., Baby, P., Ramos, A., Mengual, L., Roura, P., Yuste, M.C., Guarner, A., Rovira, A., Santamaría, M.I., Mata, M., de Juan, C., Brau, A., Marti, A., Mitjavila, M.T., Portillo, M.P., Sáez, G., and Tur, J.
- Subjects
fatty acid ,nutrition ,sudden cardiac death ,Diet and Nutrition - Abstract
Background: Epidemiological evidence suggests a cardioprotective role of α‐linolenic acid (ALA), a plant‐derived ω‐3 fatty acid. It is unclear whether ALA is beneficial in a background of high marine ω‐3 fatty acids (long‐chain n‐3 polyunsaturated fatty acids) intake. In persons at high cardiovascular risk from Spain, a country in which fish consumption is customarily high, we investigated whether meeting the International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids recommendation for dietary ALA (0.7% of total energy) at baseline was related to all‐cause and cardiovascular disease mortality. We also examined the effect of meeting the society's recommendation for long‐chain n‐3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (≥500 mg/day). Methods and Results: We longitudinally evaluated 7202 participants in the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) trial. Multivariable‐adjusted Cox regression models were fitted to estimate hazard ratios. ALA intake correlated to walnut consumption (r=0.94). During a 5.9‐y follow‐up, 431 deaths occurred (104 cardiovascular disease, 55 coronary heart disease, 32 sudden cardiac death, 25 stroke). The hazard ratios for meeting ALA recommendation (n=1615, 22.4%) were 0.72 (95% CI 0.56–0.92) for all‐cause mortality and 0.95 (95% CI 0.58–1.57) for fatal cardiovascular disease. The hazard ratios for meeting the recommendation for long‐chain n‐3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n=5452, 75.7%) were 0.84 (95% CI 0.67–1.05) for all‐cause mortality, 0.61 (95% CI 0.39–0.96) for fatal cardiovascular disease, 0.54 (95% CI 0.29–0.99) for fatal coronary heart disease, and 0.49 (95% CI 0.22–1.01) for sudden cardiac death. The highest reduction in all‐cause mortality occurred in participants meeting both recommendations (hazard ratio 0.63 [95% CI 0.45–0.87]). Conclusions: In participants without prior cardiovascular disease and high fish consumption, dietary ALA, supplied mainly by walnuts and olive oil, relates inversely to all‐cause mortality, whereas protection from cardiac mortality is limited to fish‐derived long‐chain n‐3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Clinical Trial Registration URL: http://www.Controlled-trials.com/. Unique identifier: ISRCTN35739639.
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- 2016
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17. Deformación de terrazas fluviales recientes en la franja costera cantábrica
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Cendrero, A., Díaz de Terán, J. R., and Moñino, M.
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Neotectonics ,Fluvial terraces - Abstract
Evidence of faulting with displacements of several meters in a fluvial terrace 20 m above the present river level has been found in Polanco, near Santander. The site is located nead a diapir of Triassic clays and salts. This shows that there has been deformation in the area during late Quaternary times, perhaps only in relation to diapir emplacement, En Polanco, cerca de Santander, se han encontrado evidencias de formación de fallas con desplazamiento de varios metros en una terraza fluvial a 20 m sobre el nivel actual del río. El yacimiento se encuentra cerca de un diapiro de arcilla y sales del Triásico. Esto nos muestra que ha habido deformación en esa zona durante el Cuaternario tardío, posiblemente solo en relación con la plataforma de diapiro.
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- 1988
18. Recommended domestic handling of fruits and vegetables to preserve their nutritional value,Recomendaciones de manipulación doméstica de frutas y hortalizas para preservar su valor nutritivo
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Basulto, J., Moñino, M., Farran, A., Eduard Baladia, Manera, M., Cervera, P., Romero-De-Ávila, M. D., Miret, F., Astiasarán, I., Bonany, J., Gelabert, V., Ballesteros, J. M., Martínez, A., Palou, A., Labrador, J., Marques-Lopes, I., Russolillo, G., Alonso, M., Riquelme, F., Polanco, I., Rodríguez-Artalejo, F., and Martínez, N.
19. Dietary α-Linolenic Acid, Marine ω-3 Fatty Acids, and Mortality in a Population With High Fish Consumption: Findings From the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) Study
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Sala-Vila, A., Guasch-Ferré, Marta, Hu, F.B., Sánchez-Tainta, A., Bulló, M., Serra-Mir, M., López-Sabater, C., Sorlí, J.V., Arós, F., Fiol, M., Muñoz, M.A., Riera, C., Francés, F., Vinyoles, E., Guarner, A., Márquez, F., Guillén, M., Rovira, M.A., Piñol, J.L., Sacanella, E., Basora, T., García, Y., Rovira, A., Santamaría, M.I., Mata, M., de Juan, C., Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Valentina, Pages, M.A., Brau, A., Urtasun-Samper, A., Ruano, C., Tresserra-Rimbau, A., de Santamaría, L., Llopis-Osorio, E., Marti, A., Chiva, G., Moñino, M., Mitjavila, M.T., Valderas, P., Arranz, S., Carrasco, P., Alonso Gómez, A., Galera, A., Alonso, A., Baena, J.M., Basterra-Gortari, F. Javier, Carratalá-Calvo, A., Gil Zarzosa, J., García, M., Pérez-Heras, A., Frontera, G., Oller, M., Benavent, J., Gea, A., Ginard, M., Amat, J., Gueto Rubio, M.V., Diaz-López, A., Clos, J., Pla, I., Amorós, M., Bonet, M.T., Baby, P., de la Torre, Rafael, Martín, M.T., Lapetra, José, Lamuela-Raventós, Rosa M., García-Valdueza, M., Sánchez, M.S., Martin, F., Macías-Gutiérrez, B., Altirriba, J., Tort, R., Isach, A., Fitó, Montserrat, Sarmiendo De La Fe, F., Romero, S., Costa, B., Elosúa, R., García, L., Cabré, J.J., Babio, N., Santana-Santana, A.J., Fernández-Ballart, J., Hernández, J.M., García García, M., Ibarrola-Jurado, Nuria, San Vicente, J., Toledo, E., Buil-Cosiales, P., Ruiz-Canela, M., Vargas López, E., Simón, C., de Diego Salas, J., Sanjulián, B., Felipe, I., Falcón-Sanabria, I., Serra-Majem, L., Trias, F., Díez-Espino, Javier, Viñas, C., Martínez, E., Extremera-Urabayen, V., Núñez-Córdoba, J.M., Proenza, A., Santos, J.M., García-Arellano, A., Marrugat, J., González, J.I., Ferrer, M., Arroyo-Azpa, C., García-Pérez, L., Villanueva-Tellería, J., Cortés-Ugalde, F., Gilabert, R., de la Cruz, E., Sagredo-Arce, T., Ros, E., Duaso, I., Jurado-Ruíz, Enrique, Sarasa, I., De La Noceda-Montoy, M.D.G., Saiz, C., Mengual, L., Vigata-López, M.D., Portolés, O., Giménez, F.J., Montero Romero, Emilio, Verdú, J.M., Martínez, P., Coltell, O., Ortiz, A.P., Soler, Y., Cofán, M., Guillem-Saiz, P., Osma, R., Yuste, M.C., Quiles, L., Ruiz-Baixauli, J., Estruch, R., Pascual, V., Baca Osorio, A., Fiol, F., Bertolín-Muñoz, A., Salaverría, I., del Hierro, T., Corella, D., Razquin, C., Portillo, M.P., Algorta, J., Sánchez Luque, J.J., Ramos, A., Francisco, S., Jover, A., Parra, L., García, J., Covas, María Isabel, Medina-Remón, Alexander, Iglesias, C., Tello, S., Sáez, G., Zazpe, I., Salas-Salvadó, J., Prieto, R., Liroz, M., Vila, J., Álvarez-Pérez, J., Molina, C., Schröder, H., Díaz Benítez, E., Bautista-Castaño, Inmaculada, Martínez-González, M.A., Doménech, M., Godoy, D., Manzano, E., Maldonado-Díaz, I., Flores, G., Quinzavos, L., Churio-Beraza, B., Sánchez-Villegas, A., Barragán, R., Sorli, M., Castro, I., Gómez-Gracia, Enrique, Roura, P., García Roselló, J., Henríquez, P., Tur, J., Ortega-Calvo, M., Fernández-Crehuet, Joaquín, Benítez Pont, R., Bianchi Alba, M., Wärnberg, J., Loma-Osorio, A., Alegret, C., Gómez-Huelgas, R., Asensio, E.M., Alfredo Martínez, J., Bargalló, N., Martínez-González, J., Román, P., Bes-Rastrollo, M., Velasco García, V., García, F.José, Iglesias, P., González, R., Goñi, E., Muñoz-Aguayo, Daniel, Corchado, Y., Millán, S., Sanz, E., Mayoral, E., Leal, M., Martínez-Lapiscina, E.H., Lama, C., Padres, E., Ortega-Azorín, C., Pintó, Xavier, Altés, A., Figueras, R., Solanich, X., Pujol, R., Castellote-Bargalló, A. I., Simón-García, C., Arceiz Campo, M.T., Corbella, E., Valls-Pedret, C., Serrano-Martínez, M., Casas, R., Martín-Rillo, M.J., Cabezas, C., Universitat de Barcelona, Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (España), and Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
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Male ,Gerontology ,Time Factors ,Epidemiology ,modelos de riesgos proporcionales ,humanos ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,estudios prospectivos ,evaluación de riesgos ,Medicine ,Nuts ,Sudden cardian death ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Food science ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,mediana edad ,Original Research ,Diet and Nutrition ,Aged, 80 and over ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,education.field_of_study ,anciano ,alpha-Linolenic acid ,dieta ,Factors de risc en les malalties ,Hàbits alimentaris ,Fatty Acids ,ω-3 fatty acids ,Fatty acids in human nutrition ,alpha-Linolenic Acid ,distribución de la ji al cuadrado ,Middle Aged ,Cardiovascular system ,nutrition ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Dieta ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nutritive Value ,conducta de reducción del riesgo ,Risk factors in diseases ,Food habits ,Population ,enfermedades cardiovasculares ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Juglans ,Risk Assessment ,sudden cardiac death ,03 medical and health sciences ,alimentos del mar ,factores de tiempo ,Mediterranean cooking ,Àcids grassos en la nutrició ,Fatty Acids, Omega-3 ,Cuina mediterrània ,Peix com a aliment ,Humans ,factores de riesgo ,análisis multifactorial ,education ,Olive Oil ,Dieta -- Mediterrània, Regió de la ,Dieta mediterranea ,ácidos grasos ,α-linolenic acid ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Sistema cardiovascular ,Chi-Square Distribution ,business.industry ,Correction ,Fatty acid ,Hàbits alimentaris -- Mediterrània, Regió de la ,Protective Factors ,Fish consumption ,Predimed ,Diet ,nueces ,chemistry ,Seafood ,Spain ,Multivariate Analysis ,valor nutritivo ,estudios longitudinales ,fatty acid ,business ,Risk Reduction Behavior ,ácido alfa-linolénico - Abstract
12 Páginas.-- 6 Tablas.-- 1 Figura, Background-Epidemiological evidence suggests a cardioprotective role of α-linolenic acid (ALA), a plant-derived ω-3 fatty acid. It is unclear whether ALA is beneficial in a background of high marine ω-3 fatty acids (long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids) intake. In persons at high cardiovascular risk from Spain, a country in which fish consumption is customarily high, we investigated whether meeting the International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids recommendation for dietary ALA (0.7% of total energy) at baseline was related to all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality. We also examined the effect of meeting the society's recommendation for long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (≥500 mg/day). Methods and Results-We longitudinally evaluated 7202 participants in the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) trial. Multivariable-adjusted Cox regressionmodels were fitted to estimate hazard ratios. ALA intake correlated towalnut consumption (r=0.94). During a 5.9-y follow-up, 431 deaths occurred (104 cardiovascular disease, 55 coronary heart disease, 32 sudden cardiac death, 25 stroke). The hazard ratios formeeting ALArecommendation (n=1615, 22.4%) were 0.72 (95% CI 0.56-0.92) for all-causemortality and 0.95 (95% CI 0.58-1.57) for fatal cardiovascular disease. The hazard ratios formeeting the recommendation for long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n=5452, 75.7%) were 0.84 (95% CI 0.67-1.05) for all-causemortality, 0.61 (95% CI 0.39-0.96) for fatal cardiovascular disease, 0.54 (95% CI 0.29-0.99) for fatal coronary heart disease, and 0.49 (95% CI 0.22-1.01) for sudden cardiac death. The highest reduction in all-cause mortality occurred in participants meeting both recommendations (hazard ratio 0.63 [95% CI 0.45-0.87]). Conclusions-In participants without prior cardiovascular disease and high fish consumption, dietary ALA, supplied mainly by walnuts and olive oil, relates inversely to all-cause mortality, whereas protection from cardiac mortality is limited to fish-derived long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids., This study was funded in part by Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII) (Spanish Ministry of Economy) through grants RTIC G03/140, RTIC RD 06/0045, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares CNIC 06/2007, ISCIII FIS PS09/01292, the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN) AGL2010‐22319‐C03‐02 and AGL2009‐13906‐C02‐02, and an unrestricted grant from the California Walnut Commission. Sala‐Vila holds a Miguel Servet I fellowship from the Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through the ISCIII.
20. Using Digital Images to Characterize Canopy Coverage and Light Interception in a Processing Tomato Crop.
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Campillo, C., Prieto, M. H., Daza, C., Moñino, M. J., and García, M. I.
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- *
DIGITAL images , *PLANT canopies , *TOMATOES , *PLANT growth , *CROP yields , *COMPUTER software - Abstract
Canopy light interception (LI) is a determining factor for crop growth and yield.' Crop yield depends on a canopy's capacity to intercept incident solar radiation, which in turn depends on the available leaf area, its structure, and its efficiency in converting the energy captured by the plant into biomass. Digital images offer a series of advantages over other methods of LI estimation, including the possibility to directly process images by computer for which free software is available. The objectives of this work were to develop a simple, economical method for determining LI in low-lying crops such as processing tomato using digital images obtained with a standard, commercial camera and free software and to evaluate the influence of different types of soil coverage (bare soil and plastic mulch) on LI. Photographs of the selected areas were taken using a digital camera at a distance of 160 cm above the center of each area. The resulting digital images were then analyzed with the free software GIMP 2.2 and IMAGE J. Three methods [area (SA), contour (SC). and reclassification (SR)I were used to quantify the percentage of groundcover (PGC). They were applied to the same images and compared with L! as measured with a line quantum sensor at solar noon. There was a close relationship between L! and estimated PGC with all three methods and for different soil cover regimes. In all cases, there was a linear adjustment with a significant correlation coefficient (P < 0.01) and an r² of greater than 0.88. The adjustment with RI was narrowest when the SR method was used to estimate PGC (r² = 0.93) followed by SC (r² = 0.92) and SA (r² = 0.88). Measurements of LI based on digital images offered practical advantages with respect to the use of photosynthetically active radiation bars because the latter must be used at solar noon. In contrast, measurements obtained with a digital camera can be taken at any time of day and bright sunshine is not necessary. Different correlations were obtained for bare soil and plastic mulch conditions, so it was necessary to use a different equation to estimate LI under each condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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21. Comparing quality of life in traditional face-to-face visits with a hybrid approach of telemedicine with in-person follow-ups in recent users of advanced closed-loop systems: a randomized controlled clinical trial in patients with type 1 diabetes.
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Nattero-Chávez L, de La Calle E, Lecumberri-Pascual E, Bayona Cebada A, Ruiz Gracia T, Quintero Tobar A, Lorenzo Moñino M, Sánchez Rodríguez C, Izquierdo A, Escobar-Morreale HF, and Luque-Ramírez M
- Abstract
Background: Our objective was to assess the effect of a hybrid telemedicine approach, in conjunction with face-to-face follow-up, on the quality of life in recent users of an advanced hybrid closed-loop (AHCL) system., Methods: A 1-year open randomized (1:1) clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT04900636). Participants with type 1 diabetes (T1D) recent users of an AHCL system (Minimed
® 780G) for at least 2-6 months, and ⩾18 years old were eligible. The primary outcome was the change in quality of life measured by the Type 1 Diabetes Life (ViDa1) Questionnaire from baseline to 12 months of hybrid telemedicine plus face-to-face follow-up compared to standard clinical practice. Additionally, impacts on A1c levels, glucose metrics, advert events, and safety outcomes were assessed., Results: Between January and December 2021, 46 participants were randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either the hybrid telemedicine group ( n = 23) or the control group ( n = 23); 45 participants completed the study, with only 1 from the control group withdrawing before visit 3. At baseline, mean age was 37 ± 15 years and A1c was 6.9 ± 0.5%. After 12 months, no statistically significant differences in ViDa1 scores between groups were observed. Despite reducing in-person visits in the hybrid follow-up arm, there were no increases in adverse events. Overall, A1c levels significantly decreased from 6.9 ± 0.5% at baseline to 6.7 ± 0.5% after 12 months ( P = 0.006) without differences between treatment arms, accompanied by reductions in glycemic variability and time below the target range., Conclusion: Our study suggests that there were no significant differences in ViDa1 scores between the two groups at the end of the follow-up. However, among adult patients with T1D who recently adopted an AHCL system, satisfactory glycemic control can be attained through a hybrid follow-up approach, reducing face-to-face visits, without increasing technical complications., (© The Author(s), 2024.)- Published
- 2024
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22. Broccoli Consumption and Risk of Cancer: An Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Observational Studies.
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Baladia E, Moñino M, Pleguezuelos E, Russolillo G, and Garnacho-Castaño MV
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- Humans, Diet, Risk Factors, Female, Case-Control Studies, Brassica, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms etiology, Neoplasms prevention & control, Observational Studies as Topic
- Abstract
Background: The scientific literature has reported an inverse association between broccoli consumption and the risk of suffering from several types of cancer; however, the results were not entirely consistent across studies. A systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies were conducted to determine the association between broccoli consumption and cancer risk with the aim of clarifying the beneficial biological effects of broccoli consumption on cancer., Methods: PubMed/MEDLINE, Web of Science, Scopus, Cochrane Library (CENTRAL), and Epistemonikos databases were searched to identify all published papers that evaluate the impact of broccoli consumption on the risk of cancer. Citation chasing of included studies was conducted as a complementary search strategy. The risk of bias in individual studies was assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. A random-effects model meta-analysis was employed to quantitatively synthesize results, with the I2 index used to assess heterogeneity., Results: Twenty-three case-control studies (n = 12,929 cases and 18,363 controls; n = 31,292 individuals) and 12 cohort studies (n = 699,482 individuals) were included in the meta-analysis. The results suggest an inverse association between broccoli consumption and the risk of cancer both in case-control studies (OR: 0.64, 95% CI from 0.58 to 0.70, p < 0.001; Q = 35.97, p = 0.072, I
2 = 30.49%-moderate heterogeneity; τ2 = 0.016) and cohort studies (RR: 0.89, 95% CI from 0.82 to 0.96, p = 0.003; Q = 13.51, p = 0.333, I2 = 11.21%-low heterogeneity; τ2 = 0.002). Subgroup analysis suggested a potential benefit of broccoli consumption in site-specific cancers only in case-control studies., Conclusions: In summary, the findings indicate that individuals suffering from some type of cancer consumed less broccoli, suggesting a protective biological effect of broccoli on cancer. More studies, especially cohort studies, are necessary to clarify the possible beneficial effect of broccoli on several types of cancer.- Published
- 2024
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23. An Energy-Reduced Mediterranean Diet, Physical Activity, and Body Composition: An Interim Subgroup Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Konieczna J, Ruiz-Canela M, Galmes-Panades AM, Abete I, Babio N, Fiol M, Martín-Sánchez V, Estruch R, Vidal J, Buil-Cosiales P, García-Gavilán JF, Moñino M, Marcos-Delgado A, Casas R, Olbeyra R, Fitó M, Hu FB, Martínez-Gonzalez MÁ, Martínez JA, Romaguera D, and Salas-Salvadó J
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- Male, Humans, Female, Aged, Middle Aged, Exercise, Weight Loss, Body Composition, Metabolic Syndrome, Diet, Mediterranean, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control
- Abstract
Importance: Strategies targeting body composition may help prevent chronic diseases in persons with excess weight, but randomized clinical trials evaluating lifestyle interventions have rarely reported effects on directly quantified body composition., Objective: To evaluate the effects of a lifestyle weight-loss intervention on changes in overall and regional body composition., Design, Setting, and Participants: The ongoing Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea-Plus (PREDIMED-Plus) randomized clinical trial is designed to test the effect of the intervention on cardiovascular disease prevention after 8 years of follow-up. The trial is being conducted in 23 Spanish research centers and includes men and women (age 55-75 years) with body mass index between 27 and 40 and metabolic syndrome. The trial reported herein is an interim subgroup analysis of the intermediate outcome body composition after 3-year follow-up, and data analysis was conducted from February 1 to November 30, 2022. Of 6874 total PREDIMED-Plus participants, a subsample of 1521 individuals, coming from centers with access to a dual energy x-ray absorptiometry device, underwent body composition measurements at 3 time points., Intervention: Participants were randomly allocated to a multifactorial intervention based on an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) and increased physical activity (PA) or to a control group based on usual care, with advice to follow an ad libitum MedDiet, but no physical activity promotion., Main Outcomes and Measures: The outcomes (continuous) were 3-year changes in total fat and lean mass (expressed as percentages of body mass) and visceral fat (in grams), tested using multivariable linear mixed-effects models. Clinical relevance of changes in body components (dichotomous) was assessed based on 5% or more improvements in baseline values, using logistic regression. Main analyses were performed in the evaluable population (completers only) and in sensitivity analyses, multiple imputation was performed to include data of participants lost to follow-up (intention-to-treat analyses)., Results: A total of 1521 individuals were included (mean [SD] age, 65.3 [5.0] years; 52.1% men). In comparison with the control group (n=761), participants in the intervention arm (n=760) showed greater reductions in the percentage of total fat (between group differences after 1-year, -0.94% [95% CI, -1.19 to -0.69]; 3 years, -0.38% [95% CI, -0.64 to -0.12] and visceral fat storage after 1 year, -126 g [95% CI, -179 to -73.3 g]; 3 years, -70.4 g [95% CI, -126 to -15.2 g] and greater increases in the percentage of total lean mass at 1 year, 0.88% [95% CI, 0.63%-1.12%]; 3-years 0.34% [95% CI, 0.09%-0.60%]). The intervention group was more likely to show improvements of 5% or more in baseline body components (absolute risk reduction after 1 year, 13% for total fat mass, 11% for total lean mass, and 14% for visceral fat mass; after 3-years: 6% for total fat mass, 6% for total lean mass, and 8% for visceral fat mass). The number of participants needed to treat was between 12 and 17 to attain at least 1 individual with possibly clinically meaningful improvements in body composition., Conclusions and Relevance: The findings of this trial suggest a weight-loss lifestyle intervention based on an energy-reduced MedDiet and physical activity significantly reduced total and visceral fat and attenuated age-related losses of lean mass in older adults with overweight or obesity and metabolic syndrome. Continued follow-up is warranted to confirm the long-term consequences of these changes on cardiovascular clinical end points., Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN89898870.
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- 2023
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24. Factors associated with successful dietary changes in an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet intervention: a longitudinal analysis in the PREDIMED-Plus trial.
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Fernandez-Lazaro CI, Toledo E, Buil-Cosiales P, Salas-Salvadó J, Corella D, Fitó M, Martínez JA, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Vioque J, Romaguera D, López-Miranda J, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Serra-Majem L, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Tur JA, Martín Sánchez V, Pintó X, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía-Martín P, Vidal J, Ros E, Vázquez C, Daimiel L, SanJulián B, García-Gavilán JF, Sorlí JV, Castañer O, Zulet MÁ, Tojal-Sierra L, Pérez-Farinós N, Oncina-Canovas A, Moñino M, Garcia-Rios A, Sacanella E, Bernal-Lopez RM, Santos-Lozano JM, Vázquez-Ruiz Z, Muralidharan J, Ortega-Azorín C, Goday A, Razquin C, Goicolea-Güemez L, Ruiz-Canela M, Becerra-Tomás N, Schröder H, and Martínez González MA
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- Aged, Humans, Nutritional Status, Obesity, Overweight, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases complications, Diet, Mediterranean, Metabolic Syndrome
- Abstract
Purpose: Long-term nutrition trials may fail to respond to their original hypotheses if participants do not comply with the intended dietary intervention. We aimed to identify baseline factors associated with successful dietary changes towards an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) in the PREDIMED-Plus randomized trial., Methods: Longitudinal analysis of 2985 participants (Spanish overweight/obese older adults with metabolic syndrome) randomized to the active intervention arm of the PREDIMED-Plus trial. Dietary changes were assessed with a 17-item energy-reduced MedDiet questionnaire after 6 and 12 months of follow-up. Successful compliance was defined as dietary changes from baseline of ≥ 5 points for participants with baseline scores < 13 points or any increase if baseline score was ≥ 13 points. We conducted crude and adjusted multivariable logistic regression models to identify baseline factors related to compliance., Results: Consistent factors independently associated with successful dietary change at both 6 and 12 months were high baseline perceived self-efficacy in modifying diet (OR
6-month : 1.51, 95% CI 1.25-1.83; OR12-month : 1.66, 95% CI 1.37-2.01), higher baseline fiber intake (OR6-month : 1.62, 95% CI 1.07-2.46; OR12-month : 1.62, 95% CI 1.07-2.45), having > 3 chronic conditions (OR6-month : 0.65, 95% CI 0.53-0.79; OR12-month : 0.76, 95% CI 0.62-0.93), and suffering depression (OR6-month : 0.80, 95% CI 0.64-0.99; OR12-month : 0.71, 95% CI 0.57-0.88)., Conclusion: Our results suggested that recruitment of individuals with high perceived self-efficacy to dietary change, and those who initially follow diets relatively richer in fiber may lead to greater changes in nutritional recommendations. Participants with multiple chronic conditions, specifically depression, should receive specific tailored interventions., Trial Registration: ISRCTN registry 89898870, 24th July 2014 retrospectively registered http://www.isrctn.com/ISRCTN89898870 ., (© 2021. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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25. Milk and Dairy Products Intake Is Related to Cognitive Impairment at Baseline in Predimed Plus Trial.
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Muñoz-Garach A, Cornejo-Pareja I, Martínez-González MÁ, Bulló M, Corella D, Castañer O, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Bernal-López MR, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, López-Miranda J, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía-Martín P, Daimiel L, Sánchez VM, Vidal J, Prieto L, Ros E, Fernández-Aranda F, Camacho-Barcia L, Ortega-Azorin C, Soria M, Fiol M, Compañ-Gabucio L, Goicolea-Güemez L, Pérez-López J, Goñi N, Pérez-Cabrera J, Sacanella E, Fernández-García JC, Miró-Moriano L, Gimenez-Gracia M, Razquin C, Paz-Graniel I, Guillem P, Zomeño MD, Moñino M, Oncina-Canovas A, Salaverria-Lete I, Toledo E, Salas-Salvadó J, Schröder H, and Tinahones FJ
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- Aged, Animals, Cognitive Dysfunction prevention & control, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cultured Milk Products, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Milk, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Dairy Products adverse effects
- Abstract
Scope: To examine the association between milk and dairy products intake and the prevalence of cognitive decline among Spanish individuals at high cardiovascular risk., Methods and Results: Cross-sectional analyses are performed on baseline data from 6744 adults (aged 55-75 years old). Intake of milk and dairy products is estimated using a food frequency questionnaire grouped into quartiles. The risk of developing cognitive impairment is based on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). A higher prevalence of cognitive decline was found in subjects who consumed more grams. Patients with worse MMSE score (10-24) consumed a mean of 395.14 ± 12.21 g, while patients with better MMSE score (27-30) consumed a mean of 341.23 ± 2.73 g (p < 0.05). Those subjects with the lower milk consumption (<220 g/day) had a higher MMSE score (28.35 ± 0.045). Higher intake of fermented dairy products was observed in participants with a lower MMSE score (OR 1.340, p = 0.003). A positive correlation was found between the consumption of whole milk and the MMSE score (r = 0.066, p < 0.001)., Conclusions: These findings suggest that greater consumption of milk and dairy products could be associated with greater cognitive decline according to MMSE. Conversely, consumption of whole-fat milk could be linked with less cognitive impairment in the cross-sectional study., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Effect of a Nutritional and Behavioral Intervention on Energy-Reduced Mediterranean Diet Adherence Among Patients With Metabolic Syndrome: Interim Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Sayón-Orea C, Razquin C, Bulló M, Corella D, Fitó M, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, López-Miranda J, Bueno-Cavanillas A, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía-Martín P, Daimiel L, Sánchez VM, Vidal J, Vázquez C, Ros E, Ruiz-Canela M, Sorlí JV, Castañer O, Fiol M, Navarrete-Muñoz EM, Arós F, Gómez-Gracia E, Zulet MA, Sánchez-Villegas A, Casas R, Bernal-López R, Santos-Lozano JM, Corbella E, Bouzas C, García-Arellano A, Basora J, Asensio EM, Schröder H, Moñino M, García de la Hera M, Tojal-Sierra L, Toledo E, Díaz-López A, Goday A, Salas-Salvadó J, and Martínez-González MA
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- Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Diet Surveys, Female, Health Education, Humans, Linear Models, Lipids blood, Male, Metabolic Syndrome therapy, Middle Aged, Obesity diet therapy, Risk Factors, Spain, Caloric Restriction, Diet, Mediterranean, Exercise, Metabolic Syndrome diet therapy, Patient Compliance
- Abstract
Importance: High-quality dietary patterns may help prevent chronic disease, but limited data exist from randomized trials about the effects of nutritional and behavioral interventions on dietary changes., Objective: To assess the effect of a nutritional and physical activity education program on dietary quality., Design, Setting, and Participants: Preliminary exploratory interim analysis of an ongoing randomized trial. In 23 research centers in Spain, 6874 men and women aged 55 to 75 years with metabolic syndrome and no cardiovascular disease were enrolled in the trial between September 2013 and December 2016, with final data collection in March 2019., Interventions: Participants were randomized to an intervention group that encouraged an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet, promoted physical activity, and provided behavioral support (n = 3406) or to a control group that encouraged an energy-unrestricted Mediterranean diet (n = 3468). All participants received allotments of extra-virgin olive oil (1 L/mo) and nuts (125 g/mo) for free., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was 12-month change in adherence based on the energy-reduced Mediterranean diet (er-MedDiet) score (range, 0-17; higher scores indicate greater adherence; minimal clinically important difference, 1 point)., Results: Among 6874 randomized participants (mean [SD] age, 65.0 [4.9] years; 3406 [52%] men), 6583 (96%) completed the 12-month follow-up and were included in the main analysis. The mean (SD) er-MedDiet score was 8.5 (2.6) at baseline and 13.2 (2.7) at 12 months in the intervention group (increase, 4.7 [95% CI, 4.6-4.8]) and 8.6 (2.7) at baseline and 11.1 (2.8) at 12 months in the control group (increase, 2.5 [95% CI, 2.3-2.6]) (between-group difference, 2.2 [95% CI, 2.1-2.4]; P < .001)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this preliminary analysis of an ongoing trial, an intervention that encouraged an energy-reduced Mediterranean diet and physical activity, compared with advice to follow an energy-unrestricted Mediterranean diet, resulted in a significantly greater increase in diet adherence after 12 months. Further evaluation of long-term cardiovascular effects is needed., Trial Registration: isrctn.com Identifier: ISRCTN89898870.
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- 2019
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27. Dietary Diversity and Nutritional Adequacy among an Older Spanish Population with Metabolic Syndrome in the PREDIMED-Plus Study: A Cross-Sectional Analysis.
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Cano-Ibáñez N, Gea A, Martínez-González MA, Salas-Salvadó J, Corella D, Zomeño MD, Romaguera D, Vioque J, Aros F, Wärnberg J, Martínez JA, Serra-Majem L, Estruch R, Tinahones FJ, Lapetra J, Pintó X, Tur JA, García-Ríos A, Riquelme-Gallego B, Delgado-Rodríguez M, Matía P, Daimiel L, Martín V, Vidal J, Vázquez C, Ros E, Buil-Cosiales P, Díaz-López A, Fernández-Carrión R, Fitó M, Konieczna J, Notario-Barandiaran L, Alonso-Gómez ÁM, Contreras-Fernández E, Abete I, Sánchez-Villegas A, Casas R, Muñoz-Garach A, Santos-Lozano JM, Gallardo-Alfaro L, Basora J, Portoles O, Muñoz MÁ, Moñino M, Miralles Gisbert S, Moreno Rodríguez A, Ruiz-Canela M, Palau Galindo A, Pérez-Vega KA, and Bueno-Cavanillas A
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diet Surveys, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Obesity epidemiology, Recommended Dietary Allowances, Diet, Metabolic Syndrome, Nutritional Status
- Abstract
Dietary guidelines emphasize the importance of a varied diet to provide an adequate nutrient intake. However, an older age is often associated with consumption of monotonous diets that can be nutritionally inadequate, increasing the risk for the development or progression of diet-related chronic diseases, such as metabolic syndrome (MetS). To assess the association between dietary diversity (DD) and nutrient intake adequacy and to identify demographic variables associated with DD, we cross-sectionally analyzed baseline data from the PREDIMED-Plus trial: 6587 Spanish adults aged 55-75 years, with overweight/obesity who also had MetS. An energy-adjusted dietary diversity score (DDS) was calculated using a 143-item validated semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). Nutrient inadequacy was defined as an intake below 2/3 of the dietary reference intake (DRI) forat least four of 17 nutrients proposed by the Institute of Medicine (IOM). Logistic regression models were used to evaluate the association between DDS and the risk of nutritionally inadequate intakes. In the higher DDS quartile there were more women and less current smokers. Compared with subjects in the highest DDS quartile, those in the lowest DDS quartile had a higher risk of inadequate nutrient intake: odds ratio (OR) = 28.56 (95% confidence interval (CI) 20.80-39.21). When we estimated food varietyfor each of the food groups, participants in the lowest quartile had a higher risk of inadequate nutrient intake for the groups of vegetables, OR = 14.03 (95% CI 10.55-18.65), fruits OR = 11.62 (95% CI 6.81-19.81), dairy products OR = 6.54 (95% CI 4.64-9.22) and protein foods OR = 6.60 (95% CI 1.96-22.24). As DDS decreased, the risk of inadequate nutrients intake rose. Given the impact of nutrient intake adequacy on the prevention of non-communicable diseases, health policies should focus on the promotion of a healthy varied diet, specifically promoting the intake of vegetables and fruit among population groups with lower DDS such as men, smokers or widow(er)s.
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- 2019
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28. Association between Access to Public Open Spaces and Physical Activity in a Mediterranean Population at High Cardiovascular Risk.
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Colom A, Fiol M, Ruiz M, Compa M, Morey M, Moñino M, and Romaguera D
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Cardiovascular Diseases therapy, Exercise psychology, Leisure Activities psychology, Motor Activity, Public Facilities, Recreation Therapy methods
- Abstract
Background : Regular physical activity is an important preventive factor of cardiovascular disease. Proximity and density of public open spaces are important modifying factors on the practice of physical activity. This article explores the cross-sectional relationship between access to public open spaces (POS) and leisure time physical activity (LTPA) in elderly participants at high cardiovascular risk from PREDIMED-Baleares. Method : 428 elderly subjects at high cardiovascular risk, participating in the PREDIMED trial, from Palma de Mallorca (Spain) were assessed using Geographic Information Systems, and access to POS was determined. The quantity and intensity of LTPA was calculated using the Minnesota Leisure-Time Physical Activity Questionnaire. In order investigate the association between access to POS and LTPA, generalized linear regression models were used. Results : Better access to POS was not consistently associated with total LTPA. Only distance to the nearest park showed a borderline significant positive associated with total LTPA and moderate-vigorous LTPA but was not associated with light LTPA. Conclusions : Although living near POS was not associated to total LTPA, higher levels of moderate-vigorous LTPA were associated to distances to the nearest park. Future work should be conducted on a larger sample size, integrating a longitudinal design, and greater heterogeneity in POS access and introducing objective measures of physical activity.
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- 2018
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29. Association between dietary fibre intake and fruit, vegetable or whole-grain consumption and the risk of CVD: results from the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) trial.
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Buil-Cosiales P, Toledo E, Salas-Salvadó J, Zazpe I, Farràs M, Basterra-Gortari FJ, Diez-Espino J, Estruch R, Corella D, Ros E, Marti A, Gómez-Gracia E, Ortega-Calvo M, Arós F, Moñino M, Serra-Majem L, Pintó X, Lamuela-Raventós RM, Babio N, Gonzalez JI, Fitó M, and Martínez-González MA
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diet Surveys, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Mediterranean Region epidemiology, Middle Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Diet, Dietary Fiber administration & dosage, Feeding Behavior, Fruit, Vegetables, Whole Grains
- Abstract
Prospective studies assessing the association between fibre intake or fibre-rich food consumption and the risk of CVD have often been limited by baseline assessment of diet. Thus far, no study has used yearly repeated measurements of dietary changes during follow-up. Moreover, previous studies included healthy and selected participants who did not represent subjects at high cardiovascular risk. We used yearly repeated measurements of diet to investigate the association between fibre intake and CVD in a Mediterranean cohort of elderly adults at high cardiovascular risk. We followed-up 7216 men (55-80 years) and women (60-80 years) initially free of CVD for up to 7 years in the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea study (registered as ISRCTN35739639). A 137-item validated FFQ was repeated yearly to assess diet. The primary end point, confirmed by a blinded ad hoc Event Adjudication Committee, was a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction and stroke. Time-dependent Cox's regression models were used to estimate the risk of CVD according to baseline dietary exposures and to their yearly updated changes. We found a significant inverse association for fibre (P for trend=0·020) and fruits (P for trend=0·024) in age-sex adjusted models, but the statistical significance was lost in fully adjusted models. However, we found a significant inverse association with CVD incidence for the sum of fruit and vegetable consumption. Participants who consumed in total nine or more servings/d of fruits plus vegetables had a hazard ratio 0·60 (95 % CI 0·40, 0·96) of CVD in comparison with those consuming <5 servings/d.
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- 2016
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30. Is complying with the recommendations of sodium intake beneficial for health in individuals at high cardiovascular risk? Findings from the PREDIMED study.
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Merino J, Guasch-Ferré M, Martínez-González MA, Corella D, Estruch R, Fitó M, Ros E, Arós F, Bulló M, Gómez-Gracia E, Moñino M, Lapetra J, Serra-Majem L, Razquin C, Buil-Cosiales P, Sorlí JV, Muñoz MA, Pintó X, Masana L, and Salas-Salvadó J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cohort Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Incidence, Male, Middle Aged, Mortality, Patient Education as Topic, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Spain epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Diet, Mediterranean adverse effects, Diet, Sodium-Restricted adverse effects, Health Promotion, Nutrition Policy, Patient Compliance
- Abstract
Background: Excess sodium intake is associated with high blood pressure, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). It is unknown whether decreasing sodium intake to <2300 mg/d has an effect on CVD or all-cause mortality., Objective: The objective was to assess whether reductions in sodium intake to <2300 mg/d were associated with either an increased or a decreased risk of fatal and nonfatal CVD and all-cause mortality., Design: This observational prospective study of the PREvención con DIeta MEDiterránea (PREDIMED) trial included 3982 participants at high CVD risk. Sodium intake was evaluated with a validated food-frequency questionnaire and categorized as low (<1500 mg/d), intermediate (≥1500 to ≤2300 mg/d), high (>2300 to ≤3400 mg/d), or very high (>3400 mg/d). Subsequently, 1-y and 3-y changes in sodium intake were calculated. Multivariate relative risks were assessed by using Cox proportional hazards ratios. Marginal structural models with inverse probability weighting were used to test the effect of changes in sodium intake and the Mediterranean diet (MedDiet)., Results: We documented 125 CVD events and 131 deaths after a 4.8-y median follow-up. Sodium intake <2300 mg/d was associated with a lower risk of all-cause mortality: 48% (HR: 0.52; 95% CI: 0.30, 0.91; P = 0.02) and 49% (HR: 0.51; 95% CI: 0.26, 0.98; P = 0.04) after 1 and 3 y, respectively. Increasing sodium intake after 1 y was associated with a 72% (HR: 1.72; 95% CI: 1.01, 2.91; P = 0.04) higher risk of CVD events. The incidence rate of CVD was reduced for those who reduced their sodium intake and were randomly assigned to MedDiet interventions [4.1/10,000 (95% CI: 3.1, 8.0) compared with 4.4/10,000 (95% CI: 2.7, 12.4) person-years; P = 0.002]., Conclusions: Decreasing sodium intake to <2300 mg/d was associated with a reduced risk of all-cause mortality, whereas increasing the intake to >2300 mg/d was associated with a higher risk of CVD. Our observational data suggest that sodium intake <2300 mg/d was associated with an enhanced beneficial effect of the MedDiet on CVD. These results should be interpreted with caution, and other confirmatory studies are necessary., (© 2015 American Society for Nutrition.)
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- 2015
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31. Dietary intake and nutritional risk among free-living elderly people in Palma de Mallorca.
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Tur JA, Colomer M, Moñino M, Bonnin T, Llompart I, and Pons A
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anthropometry, Diet Surveys, Dietary Supplements, Energy Intake, Female, Humans, Male, Minerals administration & dosage, Nutrition Disorders diagnosis, Nutrition Policy, Obesity diagnosis, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Spain, Vitamins administration & dosage, Diet standards, Geriatric Assessment methods, Nutrition Disorders epidemiology, Nutritional Status, Obesity epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the dietary intake of free-living, non-institutionalised, elderly people of Palma de Mallorca, and to evaluate their nutritional status and risk of undernutrition., Design: Anthropometric and dietary survey (3-day food record), and risk of undernutrition (MNA-SF) were assessed in 230 (89 men and 141 women) free-living elderly people (average age 72.7 +/- 5.9 years) in Palma de Mallorca., Results: Prevalence of undernutrition (1% in men and 5% in women), overweight (56% in men and 39% in women) and obesity (17% in men and 21% in women) were found. Mean daily energy intake (+/- SD) was 5.7 +/- 1.5 MJ in men and 5.3 +/- 1.3 MJ among women. The contribution of macronutrients to the total energy intake was different from the Recommended Intake for the elderly, since it was too derived from proteins, fats, SFA and sugars, but in only small amounts was derived from complex carbohydrates. Animal protein intake was two-thirds the total protein intake. Dietary fibre was low. Cholesterol/SFA ratio showed dietary risk of atherogenic potential. High percentages of elderly persons showed inadequate intake of calcium, magnesium, zinc, folic acid, vitamin D, and vitamin E., Conclusions: An increase in dietary complex carbohydrate and fibre, a decrease in fats, especially SFA, and a balanced intake of animal/vegetable proteins and fats are recommended. Dietary supplementation, especially with calcium, vitamin C and E, and occasionally vitamin D, may be useful to improve nutritional and health status of free-living elderly people in Palma de Mallorca.
- Published
- 2005
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