Erschienen in:
24.05.2016
Dietary quality is associated with abdominal aortic calcification: A mean of 18-year longitudinal study in community-dwelling older adults
verfasst von:
Xianwen Shang, D. Scott, A. Hodge, B. Khan, N. Khan, D. R. English, G. G. Giles, P. R. Ebeling, K. M. Sanders
Erschienen in:
The journal of nutrition, health & aging
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Ausgabe 2/2017
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Abstract
Objective
This study aimed to examine the association between baseline and changes in dietary quality assessed by the Alternative Healthy Eating Index-2010 (AHEI-2010) and abdominal aortic calcification (AAC) among community-dwelling older adults.
Design
Population-based longitudinal study.
Setting
A subset of the Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study (MCCS).
Participants
262 community-dwelling adults (60% female) aged 53 ± 5 years at baseline.
Measurements
Dietary intake was assessed using validated Food Frequency Questionnaires at baseline (1990-1994) and follow-up (2010-2011). AAC was evaluated by radiography and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) at follow-up.
Results
Higher baseline AHEI-2010 score was associated with lower AAC severity by radiography [OR (95% CI) for Tertile 3 VS Tertile 1: 0.53 (0.29-0.99)] after adjustment for gender, age, physical activity, smoking, BMI, systolic blood pressure, plasma total cholesterol, calcium and energy intake. The association between AHEI-2010 and AAC severity by DXA was also significant in the multivariate-adjusted model [OR (95% CI) for Tertile 3 VS Tertile 1: 0.38 (0.20-0.70)]. Changes in AHEI-2010 over 18 years were not associated with AAC severity.
Conclusion
Baseline but not the changes in AHEI-2010 was inversely associated with the risk of AAC severity suggesting that a high quality diet might help prevent or delay the progression of AAC in community-dwelling older adults and the benefits might be manifested over the long-term.