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Major dietary patterns in relation to muscle strength status among middle-aged people: A cross-sectional study within the RaNCD cohort

Authors :
Leila Azadbakht
Davood Soleimani
Farid Najafi
Mehnoosh Samadi
Yahya Pasdar
Negin Kamari
Tina Khosravy
Behrouz Hamze
Mansour Rezaei
Amir Bagheri
Mohammad Mosafaghadir
Source :
Food Science & Nutrition, Food Science & Nutrition, Vol 9, Iss 12, Pp 6672-6682 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Grip strength in midlife can predict physical disability in senior years. Recent evidence shows the critical role of nutritional status on muscle function. We aimed to elucidate whether adherence to a particular dietary pattern would be associated with abnormal muscle strength among middle‐aged people. In this cross‐sectional study, a semiquantitative Food Frequency Questionnaire was used to assess the dietary intake of 2781 participants in the Ravansar Non‐Communicable Chronic Disease (RaNCD) cohort. Major dietary patterns from 28 main food groups were extracted using principal component analysis. Binary logistic regression was used to determine the association between the tertiles of the major dietary patterns and muscle strength status. Two major dietary patterns were identified: the “mixed dietary pattern” that heavily loaded with fruits, vegetables, nuts, dairies, sweets, legumes, dried fruits, fish, red meat, butter, whole grains, natural juices, poultry, pickles, olive, industrial juice, egg, processed meat, and snacks and “unhealthy dietary pattern” that heavily loaded by fats, sugar, refined grains, soft drink, salt, organ meat, tea, and coffee. Adherence to the mixed dietary pattern (OR = 1.03, 95% CI = 0.8–1.33, P for trend = 0.77) and the unhealthy dietary pattern (OR = 1.01, 95% CI = 0.79–0.13, P for trend = 0.89) did not associate with abnormal muscle strength. This study suggests that the dietary pattern involving the consumption of healthy and unhealthy food does not have an effect on muscle strength in middle‐aged adults.<br />We identified two major dietary patterns from data of participants in the Ravansar Non‐Communicable Chronic Disease (RaNCD) study. The first dietary pattern was “mixed” that heavily loaded with fruits, vegetables, nuts, dairies, sweets, legumes, dried fruits, fish, red meat, butter, whole grains, natural juices, poultry, pickles, olive, industrial juice, egg, processed meat, and snacks and the second dietary pattern was “unhealthy” that heavily loaded by fats, sugar, refined grains, soft drink, salt, organ meat, tea, and coffee. Surprisingly we found that adherence to the mixed dietary pattern and the unhealthy dietary pattern did not associate with abnormal muscle strength.

Details

ISSN :
20487177
Volume :
9
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Food sciencenutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a85ed4bc619a0457bc121fe1c4c1453