Carotid total plaque area burden according to dietary quality in adults from Córdoba-Argentina
Keywords:
Dietary quality, subclinical atherosclerosis, Carotid total plaque areaAbstract
Diet is a modifiable risk factor in the prevention of atherosclerosis, therefore the approach to dietary quality is an important tool as part of timely and preventive treatment. Objective: To evaluate the carotid total plaque area (TPA) according to dietary quality.
Observational study (n=120 persons, RePIS N°3884) in Cardiovascular Prevention Program, Córdoba-Argentina (period:2019-2022). Inclusion criteria: age 35-75 years, absence of previous cardiovascular event, respiratory, hepatic and gastrointestinal disease; GFR≥60mL/min/1.73m2, HbA1c and TSH in normal range. Food frequency was performed, and the Dietary Quality International Index (DQI-I) was calculated. Total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides and glycemia, systolic blood pressure (SBP)/diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and TPA by eco-Doppler were determined. Presence of hypertension (HT) and diabetes mellitus (DM) by self-report and/or medication consumption. Descriptive analysis, t-test and generalized linear model (GLM) gamma according to distribution of variables-IC95% were conducted.
The mean age was 59±11 years old, 63.3% were women, 85.8% were overweight (53.3% obese), 70.8% HT, 27.5% DM. Mean total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, triglycerides and glycemia were 182±42, 103±36, 50±13, 144±65, 107±29 mg/dL respectively. TAS/TAD was 129±17/77±10 mmHg. Only one person had "Healthy eating" (HE), 70.8% "Needs changes (NC)" and 28.3% "Unhealthy (UH)". Therefore, the categories NC and UH are analyzed. Between the two there was no difference in the mean biochemical values, SBP/DBP. The median TPA in UH was 47mm2(interquartile range:87mm2), while in NC it was 20mm2(interquartile range:43mm2) (p=0.008). In GLM the UH presented higher TPA with respect to NC (Coefβ=1.83;p=0.047) adjusted by categorized age, sex, total cholesterol, triglycerides, glycemia and SBP.
People with a UH diet presented higher TPA despite presenting on mean controlled laboratory values and controlled SBP/DBP. This would indicate that their control alone is insufficient in the prevention of ATs, and it is important to add the dietary approach.
Downloads
References
.
Additional Files
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Universidad Nacional de Córdoba

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
The generation of derivative works is allowed as long as it is not done for commercial purposes. The original work may not be used for commercial purposes.