1,553 research outputs found
A Cohort Study Followed for 13 Years
Background There is growing evidence of an association between oral health,
specifically dental status, and chronic systemic diseases. However, varying
measures of dental status across different populations and low study sample
has made comparison of studies and conclusion of findings unclear. Our aim is
to examine whether the number of teeth as a measure of dental status is
associated with incident chronic diseases in a cohort setting. Methods We
conducted a cohort study among 24,313 middle-aged Germans followed up for 13
years. Data on number of teeth as a measure of dental status were obtained
through self-reports. Outcomes were clinicallyâverified incident nonâfatal
myocardial infarction, stroke, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and cancer. Hazard
ratio (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were obtained from Cox regression
models. Results Increasing number of teeth is inversely related to risk of
myocardial infarction (HR: 0.97; 95% CI: 0.96, 0.99). The full multivariate
model of teeth groups showed a strong linear trend for myocardial infarction,
a less strong trend for stroke, and no relation with type 2 diabetes mellitus
and cancer in a competing risk model. Participants with 18â23 teeth and those
without teeth were at 76% (95%CI: 1.04, 3) and 2.93 times (95%CI: 1.61, 5.18)
higher risk of myocardial infarction compared to those with nearly all teeth
(28â32 teeth). Conclusions Number of teeth is specifically associated with
myocardial infarction and not with other chronic disease indicating that
dental status further strengthens the link between oral health and
cardiovascular diseases
Intake of 12 food groups and disability-adjusted life years from coronary heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes, and colorectal cancer in 16 European countries
Our aim was to estimate and rank 12 food groups according to disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) from coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, type 2 diabetes (T2D), and colorectal cancer (CRC) in 16 European countries. De novo published non-linear doseâresponse meta-analyses of prospective studies (based on 297 primary reports), and food consumption data from the European Food Safety Authority Comprehensive European Food Consumption Database in Exposure Assessment, and DALY estimates from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation were used. By implementing disease-specific counterfactual scenarios of theoretical minimum risk exposure level (TMRELs), the proportion of DALYs attributed to 12 food groups was estimated. In addition, a novel modelling approach was developed to obtain a single (optimized) TMREL across diseases. Four scenarios were analysed (A: disease-specific TMRELs/all food-disease associations; B: disease-specific TMRELs/only significant food-disease associations; C: single TMREL/all food-disease associations; D: single TMREL/only significant food-disease associations). Suboptimal food intake was associated with the following proportions of DALYs; Scenario A (highest-estimate) and D (lowest-estimate): CHD (A: 67%, D: 52%), stroke (A: 49%, D: 30%), T2D (A: 57%, D: 51%), and CRC (A: 54%, D: 40%). Whole grains (10%) had the highest impact on DALYs, followed by nuts (7.1%), processed meat (6.4%), fruit (4.4%) and fish and legumes (4.2%) when combining all scenarios. The contribution to total DALYs of all food groups combined in the different scenarios ranged from 41â52% in Austria to 51â69% in the Czech-Republic. These findings could have important implications for planning future food-based dietary guidelines as a public health nutrition strategy
A cross-sectional survey of salty snack consumption among serbian urban-living students and their contribution to salt intake
This study investigated the behavior of urban-living students related to the salty snacks consumption, and their contribution to salt daily intake. A cross-sectional survey on 1313 urban-living students (16â25 years, 61.4% university students and 38.6% high school students) used a pre-verified questionnaire created specifically for the study. The logistic regression analysis was performed to investigate the factors influencing snack consumption. The results of salt content and the snack consumption frequency were used to evaluate snack contribution to salt intake. All subjects consumed salty snacks, on average several times per week, more often at home and slightly more during periods of intensive studying, with 42% of the participants reporting to consume two or more packages per snacking occasion. Most of the participants consumed such products between main meals, but 10% of them took snacks immediately after the main meal. More high-school students than university students were in the âhigh snack groupâ (p < 0.05). The most frequently consumed salty snacks were those with the highest content of salt. Salt intake from snack products for a majority of participants ranged between 0.4 and 1 g/day. The research revealed younger age, home environment and significant contribution to salt intake as critical points in salty snack consumption among urban-living students important for the better understanding of their dietary habits
Metabolic syndrome and risk of incident diabetes: findings from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition-Potsdam Study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Several aspects concerning the relationship between the metabolic syndrome and incident diabetes are incompletely understood including the magnitude of the risk estimate, potential gender differences in the associations between the metabolic syndrome and incident diabetes, the associations between the components of the metabolic syndrome and incident diabetes, and whether the metabolic syndrome provides additional prediction beyond its components. To shed light on these issues, we examined the prospective association between the metabolic syndrome defined by the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) and International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and diabetes.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used data for 2796 men and women aged 35â65 years from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition-Potsdam Study followed for an average of 6.9 years. This analysis employed a case-cohort design that included 697 participants who developed diabetes and 2099 participants who did not. Incident diabetes was identified on the basis of self-reports and verified by contacting the patient's attending physician.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The adjusted hazard ratio for the NCEP definition was 4.62 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.90â5.48) and that for the IDF definition was 4.59 (95% CI: 3.84â5.50). The adjusted hazard ratios for the NCEP but not IDF definition were higher for women than men. When participants who had no cardiometabolic abnormalities were used as the reference group for the NCEP definition, the adjusted hazard ratio for having 3 or more abnormalities increased to 22.50 (95% CI: 11.21â45.19). Of the five components, abdominal obesity and hyperglycemia were most strongly associated with incident diabetes.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>In this study population, both definitions of the metabolic syndrome provided similar estimates of relative risk for incident diabetes. The increase in risk for participants with the metabolic syndrome according to the NCEP definition was very large when contrasted with the risk among those who had no cardiometabolic abnormalities.</p
Objective measurement of physical activity in a random sample of Saint-Petersburg inhabitants
Background: World Health Organization (WHO) experts listed physical inactivity in leading risk factors for global mortality. Current research shows that only objective measurement of physical activity may provide accurate information on this parameter. The aim of our study was to assess the 7-day physical activity monitoring using triaxial accelerometers in a random sample of Saint-Petersburg inhabitants.
Material and methods: As a part of all-Russian epidemiology survey ESSE-RF there was involved random sampling of 1600 Saint-Petersburg inhabitants (25â65 years) stratified by age and sex. After that a random sub-population of 100 subjects was selected. All subjects filled in questionnaire regarding physical activity, occupation, education and nutrition. Anthropometry (weight, height with body-mass index calculation, waist circumference) was performed. Actigraph GT3X+ (Actigraph LLC, USA) accelerometer and physical activity diary were used in order to evaluate physical activity monitoring for 7 days. Adequate levels of physical activity (PA) were defined as more than 10 000 steps/day and at least 150 minutes/week of moderate and vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in bouts of 10 minutes or more.
Results: 1/2 of subjects were physically active according to steps, and 1/3 according to MVPA time criteria. No gender, occupation or body composition differences were revealed in physically active and inactive subjects. Almost 50% of physically active subjects had balanced workweek-weekend PA profile, and the same criterion is true only for 13% of subjects in inactive group. In both groups the same peaks of MVPA were revealed â at 8.00â9.00 and 18.00â19.00, which are typical transportation time, but in active group these peaks were significantly higher. According to PA diaries, in most of cases physical inactivity was related to the usage of private or public transport.
Conclusion: Triaxial PA-monitoring shows, that 40â60% of subjects were physically inactive, and 150-min MVPA goal can easily be achieved by only increasing walking time during transportation peaks. The physical inactivity was not determined by the type of occupation, sex or age, instead it was mainly influenced by the usage of cars in the morning and evening transportation time, rather than walking
Methodological utility of chemerin as a novel biomarker of immunity and metabolism
Chemerin is a recently discovered adipokine with inflammatory and metabolic
actions relevant for chronic disease development. However, evidence from human
research on the role of chemerin in chronic disease risk is still lacking. We
assessed the reliability of plasma chemerin concentrations measured on two
occasions over a 4-month period in 207 apparently healthy participants. In
addition, we explored the cross-sectional associations between chemerin and
inflammatory biomarkers using Spearman partial correlation and multivariable
linear regression analyses. Intra-individual reproducibility of chemerin
measurements was assessed by calculating intraclass correlation coefficients
(ICCs) and exploration of BlandâAltman plots. Reliability analyses revealed
good reproducibility of chemerin measurements (ICC: 0.72 (95%-CI 0.65, 0.78)).
Visual inspection of BlandâAltman plots confirmed that the two time point
measurements had a high level of agreement. In correlation analyses, chemerin
was positively correlated with adiposity measures (body mass index and waist
circumference). In addition, independent of adiposity measures, chemerin was
correlated with the biomarkers C-reactive protein, fatty acid-binding protein
4 and progranulin (Rho-s ranging from 0.23 to 0.37). In multivariable linear
regression analysis, a combination of correlated factors including body mass
index, waist circumference, C-reactive protein, progranulin and fatty acid-
binding protein-4 explained 28.0% of chemerin concentrations. These findings
demonstrate methodological utility of chemerin concentrations in population-
based research setting. Human studies are highly warranted in order to provide
further insights into the role of chemerin as a biomarker linking immunity and
metabolism in relation to chronic disease risk
Effect of Fluid Intake on Hydration Status and Skin Barrier Characteristics in Geriatric Patients: An Explorative Study
Background/Aim: Inadequate fluid intake is assumed to be a trigger of water-loss dehydration, which is a major health risk in aged and geriatric populations. Thus, there is a need to search for easy to use diagnostic tests to identify dehydration. Our overall aim was to investigate whether skin barrier parameters could be used for predicting fluid intake and/or hydration status in geriatric patients. Methods: An explorative observational comparative study was conducted in a geriatric hospital including patients aged 65 years and older. We measured 3-day fluid intake, skin barrier parameters, Overall Dry Skin Score, serum osmolality, cognitive and functional health, and medications. Results: Forty patients were included (mean age 78.45 years and 65% women) with a mean fluid intake of 1,747 mL/day. 20% of the patients were dehydrated and 22.5% had an impending dehydration according to serum osmolality. Multivariate analysis suggested that skin surface pH and epidermal hydration at the face were associated with fluid intake. Serum osmolality was associated with epidermal hydration at the leg and skin surface pH at the face. Fluid intake was not correlated with serum osmolality. Diuretics were associated with high serum osmolality. Conclusions: Approximately half of the patients were diagnosed as being dehydrated according to osmolality, which is the current reference standard. However, there was no association with fluid intake, questioning the clinical relevance of this measure. Results indicate that single skin barrier parameters are poor markers for fluid intake or osmolality. Epidermal hydration might play a role but most probably in combination with other tests
Reliability of Serum Metabolite Concentrations over a 4-Month Period Using a Targeted Metabolomic Approach
Metabolomics is a promising tool for discovery of novel biomarkers of chronic disease risk in prospective epidemiologic studies. We investigated the between- and within-person variation of the concentrations of 163 serum metabolites over a period of 4 months to evaluate the metabolite reliability expressed by the intraclass-correlation coefficient (ICC: the ratio of between-person variance and total variance). The analyses were performed with the BIOCRATES AbsoluteIDQ⢠targeted metabolomics technology, including acylcarnitines, amino acids, glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids and hexose in 100 healthy individuals from the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)-Potsdam study who had provided two fasting blood samples 4 months apart. Overall, serum reliability of metabolites over a 4-month period was good. The median ICC of the 163 metabolites was 0.57. The highest ICC was observed for hydroxysphingomyelin C14:1 (ICCâ=â0.85) and the lowest was found for acylcarnitine C3:1 (ICCâ=â0). Reliability was high for hexose (ICCâ=â0.76), sphingolipids (median ICCâ=â0.66; range: 0.24â0.85), amino acids (median ICCâ=â0.58; range: 0.41â0.72) and glycerophospholipids (median ICCâ=â0.58; range: 0.03â0.81). Among acylcarnitines, reliability of short and medium chain saturated compounds was good to excellent (ICC range: 0.50â0.81). Serum reliability was lower for most hydroxyacylcarnitines and monounsaturated acylcarnitines (ICC range: 0.11â0.45 and 0.00â0.63, respectively). For most of the metabolites a single measurement may be sufficient for risk assessment in epidemiologic studies with healthy subjects
Serum ferritin and risk of myocardial infarction in the elderly: the Rotterdam Study
BACKGROUND: Elevated body iron stores have been suggested to be a risk factor for ischemic heart disease.
OBJECTIVE: We examined whether elevated serum ferritin concentrations, other indicators of iron status, and dietary iron affected the incidence of myocardial infarction (MI) in an elderly population.
DESIGN: A nested, case-control study of 60 patients who had their first MI and 112 age- and sex-matched control subjects embedded in the population-based cohort of the Rotterdam Study.
RESULTS: The age- and sex-adjusted risk of MI for subjects with serum ferritin concentrations > or = 200 microg/L was 1.82 (95% CI: 0.90, 3.69; P = 0.096). The odds ratio (OR) was 1.26 (95% CI: 0.98, 1.64; P = 0.078) for the highest tertile of serum ferritin and was only slightly altered in a multivariate model. Risk of MI associated with the highest tertile of ferritin was most evident in current or former smokers (OR: 1.68; 95% CI: 1.17, 2.47; P for trend = 0.008) and in subjects with hypercholesterolemia (OR: 1.43; 95% CI: 0.99, 2.11; P for trend = 0.056) or diabetes (OR: 2.41; 95% CI: 1.12, 7.67; P for trend = 0.027). No association with risk of MI was observed for tertiles of serum iron, serum transferrin, or total dietary iron. For dietary heme iron, risk of MI was significantly increased in a multivariate model in which dietary energy, fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol were adjusted for (OR: 4.01; 95% CI: 1.17, 15.87; P for trend = 0.031).
CONCLUSION: In the presence of other risk factors, serum ferritin may adversely affect ischemic heart disease risk in the elderly
Comparative effects of different dietary approaches on blood pressure in hypertensive and pre-hypertensive patients: A systematic review and network meta-analysis
Pairwise meta-analyses have shown beneficial effects of individual dietary approaches on blood
pressure but their comparative effects have not been established. Objective: Therefore we performed a
systematic review of different dietary intervention trials and estimated the aggregate blood pressure effects
through network meta-analysis including hypertensive and pre-hypertensive patients. Design: PubMed,
Cochrane CENTRAL, and Google Scholar were searched until June 2017. The inclusion criteria were defined as
follows: i) Randomized trial with a dietary approach; ii) hypertensive and pre-hypertensive adult patients; and iii)
minimum intervention period of 12 weeks. In order to determine the pooled effect of each intervention relative
to each of the other intervention for both diastolic and systolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP), random effects
network meta-analysis was performed. Results: A total of 67 trials comparing 13 dietary approaches (DASH, lowfat, moderate-carbohydrate, high-protein, low-carbohydrate, Mediterranean, Palaeolithic, vegetarian, low-GI/GL,
low-sodium, Nordic, Tibetan, and control) enrolling 17,230 participants were included. In the network metaanalysis, the DASH, Mediterranean, low-carbohydrate, Palaeolithic, high-protein, low-glycaemic index, lowsodium, and low-fat dietary approaches were significantly more effective in reducing SBP (ÂĄ8.73 to
ÂĄ2.32 mmHg) and DBP (ÂĄ4.85 to ÂĄ1.27 mmHg) compared to a control diet. According to the SUCRAs, the DASH
diet was ranked the most effective dietary approach in reducing SBP (90%) and DBP (91%), followed by the
Palaeolithic, and the low-carbohydrate diet (ranked 3rd for SBP) or the Mediterranean diet (ranked 3rd for DBP).
For most comparisons, the credibility of evidence was rated very low to moderate, with the exception for the
DASH vs. the low-fat dietary approach for which the quality of evidence was rated high. Conclusion: The present network meta-analysis suggests that the DASH dietary approach might be the most effective dietary measure toreduce blood pressure among hypertensive and pre-hypertensive patients based on high quality evidence
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