Literature DB >> 11164124

Lifestyle interventions influence relative errors in self-reported diet intake of sodium and potassium.

M A Espeland1, S Kumanyika, A C Wilson, S Wilcox, D Chao, J Bahnson, D M Reboussin, L Easter, B Zheng.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To characterize the distribution of errors in self-reported sodium and potassium dietary intakes relative to more objective urine measures among participants receiving lifestyle interventions.
METHODS: We analyzed longitudinal data from 900 individuals with hypertension who had been enrolled in a randomized controlled clinical trial to establish whether usual care or three lifestyle interventions (weight loss, sodium reduction, and combined weight loss and sodium reduction) could effectively substitute for phamacotherapy. Repeated standardized 24-hour diet recalls and 24-hour urine collections were collected over up to three years of follow-up to estimate sodium and potassium intakes. By contrasting self-reported and urine-based sodium and potassium data collected before and during interventions, we examined the relative impact of intervention assignment on estimated intakes, repeatability, and multivariate measurement error.
RESULTS: Relative to urine-based measures, mean self-reported sodium intakes were biased about 10% lower among participants assigned to combined weight loss and sodium reduction, but were unaffected by the other interventions. The repeatability of self-report measures increased slightly with time, particularly among participants assigned to sodium interventions. Errors in self-reported sodium and potassium intakes were correlated before the start of the intervention, but became uncorrelated among individuals assigned to sodium restriction interventions.
CONCLUSIONS: Lifestyle interventions may influence not only diet intake, but also the measurement of diet intake.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11164124     DOI: 10.1016/s1047-2797(00)00173-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Epidemiol        ISSN: 1047-2797            Impact factor:   3.797


  17 in total

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5.  Translating Findings from Lifestyle Intervention Trials of Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes to the Primary Care Setting.

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7.  The effect of a physical activity intervention on bias in self-reported activity.

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8.  Measurement error corrected sodium and potassium intake estimation using 24-hour urinary excretion.

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9.  Comparison of 24-hour urine and 24-hour diet recall for estimating dietary sodium intake in populations: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

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10.  Twenty-Four-Hour Diet recall and Diet records compared with 24-hour urinary excretion to predict an individual's sodium consumption: A Systematic Review.

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