학술논문

Dietary patterns and longitudinal change in hip bone mineral density among older men
Document Type
article
Source
Osteoporosis International. 29(5)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Public Health
Health Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Nutrition and Dietetics
Osteoporosis
Nutrition
Clinical Research
Aging
Prevention
Musculoskeletal
Absorptiometry
Photon
Aged
Bone Density
Diet
Diet Surveys
Factor Analysis
Statistical
Feeding Behavior
Femur Neck
Hip Joint
Humans
Life Style
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Prospective Studies
BMD change
Dietary pattern
Factor analysis
Older men
Prudent
Western
Osteoporotic Fractures in Men (MrOS) Study Research Group
Biomedical Engineering
Public Health and Health Services
Endocrinology & Metabolism
Clinical sciences
Epidemiology
Language
Abstract
Studying dietary patterns is often more informative than individual nutrients or foods. We found that a Prudent dietary pattern (rich in vegetables and fish) was associated with reduced loss of total hip BMD in older men. A Prudent dietary pattern may be a potential lifestyle strategy for minimizing bone loss. INTRODUCTION:This study aimed to identify baseline dietary patterns using factor analysis in a cohort of older men and to evaluate whether the dietary patterns were associated with bone mineral density change (%ΔBMD) at the total hip and femoral neck over time. METHODS:Participants (n = 4379; mean age 72.9 ± 5.5 years) were from the Osteoporotic Fractures in Men (MrOS) prospective cohort study and had dietary data collected at baseline (March 2000-April 2002) and BMD measured at baseline and Visit 2 (March 2005-May 2006). Dietary intake was assessed with a brief Block food frequency questionnaire (FFQ); factor analysis was used to derive dietary patterns. BMD was measured by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA); %ΔBMD was calculated from baseline to Visit 2. We used generalized linear regression to estimate least square (LS) means of %ΔBMD in quartiles of the dietary pattern scores adjusted for potential confounding factors. RESULTS:Two major dietary patterns were derived: Prudent (abundant in vegetables, salad, and non-fried fish) and Western (rich in hamburger, fries, processed meats, cheese, and sweets/desserts). There was an inverse association between adherence to the Prudent pattern and total hip %ΔBMD (p-trend = 0.028 after adjusting for age and clinical site; p-trend = 0.033 after further adjustment for smoking, calcium supplement use, diabetes, hypertension, and total energy intake). No other consistent associations between dietary patterns and %ΔBMD were observed. CONCLUSIONS:Greater adherence to a Prudent dietary pattern may attenuate total hip BMD loss (%ΔBMD) in older men.