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One-year changes in fruit and vegetable variety intake and cardiometabolic risk factors changes in a middle-aged Mediterranean population at high cardiovascular risk

Authors :
López-González, Leyre
Becerra-Tomás, Nerea
Babio, Nancy
Martínez-González, Miguel Ángel
Nishi, Stephanie K
Corella, Dolores
Goday, Albert
Romaguera, Dora
Vioque, Jesús
Alonso-Gómez, Ángel M
Wärnberg, Julia
Martínez, J Alfredo
Serra-Majem, Luís
Estruch, Ramon
Bernal-López, M Rosa
Lapetra, José
Pintó, Xavier
Tur, Josep A
López-Miranda, José
Bueno-Cavanillas, Aurora
Delgado-Rodríguez, Miguel
Matía-Martín, Pilar
Daimiel, Lidia
Martín-Sánchez, Vicente
Vidal, Josep
Vázquez, Clotilde
Ros, Emilio
Vázquez-Ruiz, Zenaida
Martín-Luján, Francisco M
Sorlí, José V
Castañer, Olga
Zulet, M Angeles
Tojal-Sierra, Lucas
Carabaño-Moral, Rosa
Román-Maciá, Josefa
Rayó, Elena
García-Ríos, Antonio
Casas, Rosa
Gómez-Pérez, Ana M
Santos-Lozano, José M
Buil-Cosiales, Pilar
Asensio, Eva M
Lassale, Camille
Abete, Itziar
Salaverria-Lete, Itziar
Sayón-Orea, Carmen
Schröder, Helmut
Salas-Salvadó, Jordi
PREDIMED-Plus Investigators
Source :
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, r-ISABIAL. Repositorio Institucional de Producción Científica del Instituto de Investigación Biomédica y Sanitaria de Alicante, instname
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Previous studies have shown beneficial associations between fruit and vegetable (FV) consumption and cardiometabolic risk factors. However, variety in FV, which may play an important role on cardiovascular health due to the different nutrient and phytochemical content among the different groups and subgroups of FV has been poorly investigated. We longitudinally investigated associations between 1-year changes in variety and quantity of FV and concurrent changes in cardiometabolic risk factors in elderly subjects with overweight/obesity and metabolic syndrome. METHODS: a one-year data longitudinal analysis of 6647 PREDIMED-plus study participants (48% women) was conducted. Data were collected at baseline, six months and 1-year of follow-up. Variety and quantity of FV were estimated using a food frequency questionnaire and continuous scores for variety were created based on items/month of FV. Linear mixed-models adjusted for potential confounders were performed to estimate associations (ß-coefficients and 95% confidence interval) between 1-year changes in FV variety and/or quantity and concurrent changes in cardiometabolic risk factors. RESULTS: Two points increment in the FV variety score over one year was associated with a concurrent decrease in glucose (-0.33 mg/dL (0.58, -0.07)), body weight (-0.07 kg (-0.13, -0.02)) and waist circumference (WC) (-0.08 cm (-0.16, -10.01)). An increment of 100 g/d of FV over one year was associated with a concurrent decrease in triglycerides (-0.50 mg/dL (-0.93, -0.08)), glucose (-0.21 mg/dL (-0.32, -0.11)), body weight (-0.11 kg (-0.15, -0.07)) and WC (-0.10 cm (-0.14, -0.06)) over 1-year. Changes in FV consumption which led to higher quantity and variety over one year were associated with downward changes in glucose (-1.26 mg/dL (-2.09, -0.43)), body weight (-0.40 kg (-0.58, -0.23)) and WC (-0.50 cm (-0.73, -0.28)). CONCLUSION: Greater variety, in combination with higher quantity of FV was significantly associated with a decrease in several cardiometabolic risk factors among elderly subjects at high cardiovascular risk.

Details

ISSN :
14765640 and 09543007
Volume :
76
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d7420723c9c0dd0a0dd76c69f2d0291a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41430-022-01124-3