Back to Search Start Over

A priori-defined dietary patterns are associated with reduced risk of stroke in alarge Italian cohort

Authors :
Domenico Palli
Giovanna Masala
Sara Grioni
Paolo Chiodini
Graziella Frasca
Salvatore Panico
Claudia Agnoli
Rosario Tumino
Sabina Sieri
Franco Berrino
Valeria Pala
Vittorio Krogh
Amalia Mattiello
Carlotta Sacerdote
Paolo Vineis
Agnoli, C
Krogh, V
Grioni, S
Sieri, S
Palli, D
Masala, G
Sacerdote, C
Vineis, P
Tumino, R
Frasca, G
Pala, V
Berrino, F
Chiodini, P
Mattiello, A
Panico, Salvatore
Chiodini, Paolo
Panico, S.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Stroke is a major cause of death. Several foods and nutrients have been linked to stroke, but their effects may be best investigated considering the entire diet. In the present EPICOR study, we investigated the association between stroke and adherence to 4 a priori-defined dietary patterns: Healthy Eating Index 2005 (HEI-2005), Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH), Greek Mediterranean Index, and Italian Mediterranean Index. We followed 40,681 volunteers and estimated the HR and 95%CI for stroke according to dietary pattern by using multivariate Cox models with adjustment for risk factors. During a mean follow-up of 7.9 y, 178 stroke cases were diagnosed (100 ischemic, 47 hemorrhagic). Scores of 3 dietary patterns (not HEI) were inversely associated with risk of all types of stroke, with the strongest association for the Italian Index [HR = 0.47 (95%CI = 0.30-0.75); third vs. first tertile]. All patterns were significantly inversely associated with ischemic stroke except the Greek Index, with the strongest association for the Italian Index [HR = 0.37 (95%CI = 0.19-0.70); third vs. first tertile]. Only the Italian Index tended to be inversely associated with hemorrhagic stroke [HR = 0.51 (95%CI = 0.22-1.20); P = 0.07)]. These epidemiological findings suggest that adherence to any one dietary pattern investigated would protect against at least one type of stroke. For our Italian population, a diet with a high score on the Italian Index was associated with the greatest risk reduction, probably because it was conceived to capture healthy eating in the context of foods typically available in Italy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4b5217fdb5236edc0aca6a439bd66f01