학술논문

Cooking Methods and Their Relationship with Anthropometrics and Cardiovascular Risk Factors among Older Spanish Adults
Document Type
article
Source
Nutrients, Vol 14, Iss 16, p 3426 (2022)
Subject
cooking methods
anthropometrics
cardiovascular risk factors
blood pressure
cardiac function biomarkers
older adults
Nutrition. Foods and food supply
TX341-641
Language
English
ISSN
2072-6643
Abstract
Food consumption has a prominent role in the occurrence of cardiometabolic diseases, however, little is known about the specific influence of cooking methods. This study examined the association between cooking methods and anthropometrics, cardiovascular risk factors, and cardiac damage biomarkers in older adults. Data were taken from 2476 individuals aged ≥65 from the Seniors-ENRICA 2 cohort in Spain and recruited between 2015 and 2017. Eight cooking methods (raw, boiling, roasting, pan-frying, frying, toasting, sautéing, and stewing) were assessed using a face-to-face validated dietary history. Study associations were summarized as adjusted percentage differences (PDs) in anthropometrics, cardiovascular risk factors, and cardiac damage biomarkers between extreme sex-specific quintiles ((5th − 1st/1st) × 100) of food consumed with each cooking method, estimated using marginal effects from generalized linear models. After adjusting for potential confounders, including diet quality, PDs corresponding to raw food consumption were −13.4% (p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: p-trend: