Literature DB >> 12875800

Vegetable intake and long-term survival among middle-aged men in Italy.

Fulvia Seccareccia1, Adalberta Alberti-Fidanza, Flaminio Fidanza, Gino Farchi, Karen M Freeman, Sergio Mariotti, Alessandro Menotti.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: To examine prospectively the relationship between vegetable consumption and long-term survival.
METHODS: In 1965, a total of 1536 Italian males from two Italian rural cohorts of the Seven Countries Study, aged 45-65 years, were examined. Information on lifestyle and food consumption collected at this visit, and total and cause-specific mortality data collected in 30 years of follow-up were analyzed for the present study.
RESULTS: During a period of 30 years, 1096 deaths occurred (308 from coronary heart disease, 325 from cancer, 158 from cerebrovascular disease and 305 from all other causes). The age-adjusted life expectancy for men consuming more than 60 g/day of vegetables was nearly 2 years longer than for men consuming less than 20 g/day. This increase in survival was more striking in smokers than nonsmokers (2.1 vs. a 1 year gain). The association also held for both geographic cohorts, although the pattern of vegetable consumption was very different in the two villages.
CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest a positive association between vegetable intake and life expectancy. Vegetable intake may be especially protective for smokers although the biological explanation for such an effect is unclear.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12875800     DOI: 10.1016/s1047-2797(02)00457-x

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


  4 in total

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3.  Behavioral Lifestyles and Survival: A Meta-Analysis.

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Review 4.  Behavioural Risk Factors in Mid-Life Associated with Successful Ageing, Disability, Dementia and Frailty in Later Life: A Rapid Systematic Review.

Authors:  Louise Lafortune; Steven Martin; Sarah Kelly; Isla Kuhn; Olivia Remes; Andy Cowan; Carol Brayne
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  4 in total

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