健康的植物性饮食与独立于循环CRP的老年人更高的身心健康有关

Kerstin Schorr, Marian Beekman, Venetka Agayn, Jeanne H.M. de Vries, Lisette C.P.G.M. De Groot, P. Eline Slagboom
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摘要

植物性饮食(PBD)已被发现是环境可持续的,并且有益于健康。观察性研究表明,较高的植物性饮食质量可以改善成年女性的健康状况,但对于老年人来说,这一点尚不清楚。这种关联可能是由于PBD的抗炎特性。老年人,通常患有慢性炎症,因此可能受益于更多的PBD。因此,我们研究了PBD与男女老年人幸福感之间的关系,并测试了这种影响是否受到循环高敏感性c反应蛋白(hsCRP)水平的影响。我们使用了基于人群的生命线队列研究(n=6,635,平均年龄=65.2岁)和测量hsCRP的子样本(n=2,251,平均年龄=65.2岁)的数据。我们应用基于食物频率问卷的植物性饮食指数来衡量健康(hPDI)和不健康(uPDI)植物性饮食的依从性。使用RAND-36问卷作为生活质量的衡量标准,我们从中得出身体(PCS)和精神成分得分(MCS)。坚持健康植物性饮食的老年人,身体健康和精神健康的几率分别高出14%和12%。同时,较高的uPDI依从性与高身体和精神健康的几率分别降低19%和14%相关。我们观察到hsCRP在植物性饮食和健康之间的关联中具有添加剂作用,但没有中介作用。我们得出的结论是,在老年男性和女性中,坚持健康的植物性饮食和循环炎症水平与身心健康独立相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A healthful plant-based diet is associated with higher physical and mental well-being among older adults independent of circulating CRP
Plant-based diets (PBD) have been found to be environmentally sustainable as well as beneficial for health. Observational research showed that higher plant-based diet quality improves well-being in adult women, however this is unclear for older adults. This association may be due to anti-inflammatory properties of PBD. Older adults, often suffering from chronic inflammation, may therefore profit from a more PBD. Therefore, we investigated the relation between PBD and well-being in older adults of both genders and tested whether the effects are influenced by circulating high-senstivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) levels. We used the data of the population-based Lifelines Cohort Study (n=6,635, mean age=65.2 years) and a subsample in which hsCRP was measured (n=2,251, mean age=65.2 years). We applied a plant-based diet index measuring adherence to a healthful (hPDI) and an unhealthful (uPDI) plant-based diet based on food frequency questionnaires. The RAND-36 questionnaire was applied as measure of quality of life, from which we derived physical (PCS) and mental component scores (MCS). Older adults with the highest adherence to a healthful plant-based diet had respectively 14% and 12% greater odds for high physical well-being and mental well-being. Meanwhile, higher adherence to uPDI was associated with respectively 19% and 14% lower odds for high physical and mental well-being. We observed an additive but no mediating effect of hsCRP on the association between plant-based diets and well-being. We conclude that in older men and women, adherence to a healthful plant-based diet and circulating levels of inflammation are independently associated with physical and mental well-being.
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