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Identification of dietary patterns associated with blood pressure in a sample of overweight Australian adults

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posted on 2024-11-16, 02:31 authored by Shirin Anil, Karen CharltonKaren Charlton, Linda TapsellLinda Tapsell, Yasmine ProbstYasmine Probst, Rhoda Ndanuko, Marijka BatterhamMarijka Batterham
The dietary approaches to stop hypertension (DASH) diet provides strong evidence for an optimal dietary pattern for blood pressure (BP) control; however, investigation at the level of key foods in a dietary pattern is sparse. This study aimed to assess the relationship between dietary patterns driven by key foods with BP in a sample of obese Australian adults. Secondary analysis was conducted on baseline data of 118 participants (45.1±8.4 years, mean BP=124.1±15.8/72.6±9.2 mm Hg) recruited in a weight reduction randomized controlled trial (ACTRN12608000425392). Dietary assessment was by a validated diet history interview. The average of three office BP measurements was taken. Factor analysis extracted dietary patterns and their relation to systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) was analysed using multiple linear regression. Eight dietary patterns were identified based on leading foods: meat and alcohol; seafood; fats; fruits and nuts; legumes; confectionery; sweet foods; and yeast extracts and seasonings. A lower SBP was associated with alignment with the fruit and nuts pattern (β=−4.1 (95% confidence interval −7.5 to −0.7) mm Hg) and with seafood for DBP (β=−2.4 (−4.6 to −0.3) mm Hg). SBP and DBP were higher with yeast extract and seasonings (β=4.3 (1.4-7.3); 2.5 (0.9-4.0) mm Hg, respectively). In obese adults attending for weight loss, dietary patterns that included larger amounts of fruits and nuts and/or seafood were associated with lower BP at baseline, whereas patterns that were characterised by yeast extract and seasonings were associated with higher BP.

Funding

Is a higher intake of omega-3 fatty acids advantageous for weight loss?

National Health and Medical Research Council

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Citation

Anil, S., Charlton, K. E., Tapsell, L. C., Probst, Y., Ndanuko, R. & Batterham, M. J. (2016). Identification of dietary patterns associated with blood pressure in a sample of overweight Australian adults. Journal of Human Hypertension, 30 (11), 672-678.

Journal title

Journal of Human Hypertension

Volume

30

Issue

11

Pagination

672-678

Language

English

RIS ID

106430

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