4.7 Article

Dietary Patterns and the Prevalence of Noncommunicable Diseases in the PURE Poland Study Participants

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15163524

Keywords

noncommunicable diseases; cardiovascular disease; hypertension; diabetes; impaired fasting glucose; dietary patterns

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The aim of this study was to analyze the association between dietary patterns and selected noncommunicable diseases in Lower Silesia, Poland. Three dietary patterns (unhealthy, healthy, and traditional) were identified using principal components analysis. The study found that individuals with a healthy dietary pattern had a lower prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, impaired fasting glucose, and visceral obesity, while those with an unhealthy pattern had a higher prevalence of visceral obesity.
The aim of the study was to analyze the association between dietary patterns (DP) identified in the group of Lower Silesia (Poland) inhabitants and the prevalence of selected noncommunicable diseases, such as total cardiovascular diseases (CVD), hypertension, diabetes, impaired fasting glucose (IFG), visceral obesity, and excessive body weight. This study involved 2023 subjects aged 35-70 years, from Wroclaw and surrounding villages. The assessment of food intake in the study group was assessed using the standardized Food Frequency Questionnaire. Dietary patterns were identified using the principal components analysis (PCA) with varimax rotation. Three dietary patterns were identified in the study group: unhealthy, healthy, and traditional. The prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, IFG, and visceral obesity decreased across the quartiles of healthy DP. Prevalence of IFG increased across the quartiles of unhealthy DP, but the prevalence of hypertension decreased. When the diet was more adherent to the traditional DP the prevalence of CVD, diabetes, IFG, visceral obesity, obesity, and being overweight was higher. DP abundant in fruits, vegetables, seeds, nuts, raisins, and unrefined grains, named healthy dietary pattern, had a beneficial association with lower prevalence of selected noncommunicable diseases. DP abundant in meat products, but poor in fruits and vegetables were positively associated with higher prevalence of total CVD, diabetes, IFG, excessive body weight, and visceral obesity.

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