Francesca Granata, Luisella Vigna, Elena Di Pierro, Alessandra Piontini, Lorena Duca, Giacomo De Luca, Silvia Fustinoni, Anna Ludovica Fracanzani, Valeria Di Stefano, Giovanna Graziadei
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The results indicated that 14 out of 16 patients consumed high levels of simple sugars and saturated fatty acids (SFA), leading to overweight conditions (BMI > 25) in 50% of patients. The bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) showed excess fat mass in 64% of patients aged 30-49 years and 40% of patients aged 51-70 years; these results were more accurate than those obtained using BMI alone. Excessive intake of simple sugars and SFA resulted in elevated blood LDL levels in 36% of younger patients and 80% of older patients. Although the dietary intake of HDL was low, its levels were above normal and positively correlated with age (r = 0.56, p = 0.02). 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引用次数: 0
摘要
急性间歇性卟啉症(AIP)是一种罕见的代谢性疾病,通常由致卟啉药物和低糖饮食引发急性发作。根据最近的发现,慢性症状在AIP患者中持续存在。为了避免这些症状,患者通常采取增加葡萄糖摄入量等预防策略,这表明营养是疾病管理的一个关键方面。鉴于AIP与葡萄糖之间的紧密联系,我们评估了16名AIP女性的人体测量数据、生化数据和营养评估,并假设葡萄糖消耗的增加可能导致营养和代谢的不平衡。结果表明,16名患者中有14名摄入了高水平的单糖和饱和脂肪酸(SFA),导致50%的患者超重(BMI为bbb25)。生物电阻抗分析(BIA)显示,30-49岁的患者中有64%存在脂肪过量,51-70岁的患者中有40%存在脂肪过量;这些结果比单独使用BMI获得的结果更准确。过量摄入单糖和SFA导致36%的年轻患者和80%的老年患者血液中LDL水平升高。膳食中HDL摄入量虽低,但高于正常水平,且与年龄呈正相关(r = 0.56, p = 0.02)。以ECW/TBW比值升高为指标的过度补水与皮质醇水平呈正相关(r = 0.67, p = 0.008),提示代谢应激。综上所述,过量摄入单糖和SFA会影响AIP患者的身体成分和生化指标,强调需要营养支持来预防代谢综合征和控制慢性症状。
Nutrition and rare diseases: a case study of patients with acute intermittent porphyria (AIP).
Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is a rare metabolic disorder characterized by acute attacks often triggered by porphyrinogenic drugs and a low-glucose diet. According to recent findings, chronic symptoms persist in AIP patients. To avoid the symptoms, patients often adopt preventive strategies such as increasing glucose intake, suggesting that nutrition is a crucial aspect of disease management. Given the strong connection between AIP and glucose, we assessed anthropometric data, biochemical data and nutritional evaluation, in 16 AIP females and hypothesized that an increase in glucose consumption may lead to an imbalance in nutrition and metabolism. The results indicated that 14 out of 16 patients consumed high levels of simple sugars and saturated fatty acids (SFA), leading to overweight conditions (BMI > 25) in 50% of patients. The bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) showed excess fat mass in 64% of patients aged 30-49 years and 40% of patients aged 51-70 years; these results were more accurate than those obtained using BMI alone. Excessive intake of simple sugars and SFA resulted in elevated blood LDL levels in 36% of younger patients and 80% of older patients. Although the dietary intake of HDL was low, its levels were above normal and positively correlated with age (r = 0.56, p = 0.02). Overhydration, indicated by an elevated ECW/TBW ratio, was positively correlated with cortisol levels (r = 0.67, p = 0.008), suggesting metabolic stress.To summarize, excessive consumption of simple sugars and SFA affects the body composition and biochemical markers of AIP patients, emphasizing the need for nutritional support to prevent metabolic syndrome and manage chronic symptoms.
期刊介绍:
Nutrition & Metabolism publishes studies with a clear focus on nutrition and metabolism with applications ranging from nutrition needs, exercise physiology, clinical and population studies, as well as the underlying mechanisms in these aspects.
The areas of interest for Nutrition & Metabolism encompass studies in molecular nutrition in the context of obesity, diabetes, lipedemias, metabolic syndrome and exercise physiology. Manuscripts related to molecular, cellular and human metabolism, nutrient sensing and nutrient–gene interactions are also in interest, as are submissions that have employed new and innovative strategies like metabolomics/lipidomics or other omic-based biomarkers to predict nutritional status and metabolic diseases.
Key areas we wish to encourage submissions from include:
-how diet and specific nutrients interact with genes, proteins or metabolites to influence metabolic phenotypes and disease outcomes;
-the role of epigenetic factors and the microbiome in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases and their influence on metabolic responses to diet and food components;
-how diet and other environmental factors affect epigenetics and microbiota; the extent to which genetic and nongenetic factors modify personal metabolic responses to diet and food compositions and the mechanisms involved;
-how specific biologic networks and nutrient sensing mechanisms attribute to metabolic variability.