Literature DB >> 25641909

Effects of short- and long-term Mediterranean-based dietary treatment on plasma LC-QTOF/MS metabolic profiling of subjects with metabolic syndrome features: The Metabolic Syndrome Reduction in Navarra (RESMENA) randomized controlled trial.

Isabel Bondia-Pons1, José Alfredo Martinez, Rocio de la Iglesia, Patricia Lopez-Legarrea, Kaisa Poutanen, Kati Hanhineva, Maria de los Ángeles Zulet.   

Abstract

SCOPE: Adherence to the Mediterranean diet has been associated with a reduced risk of metabolic syndrome (MetS). Metabolomics approach may contribute to identify beneficial associations of metabolic changes affected by Mediterranean diet-based interventions with inflammatory and oxidative-stress markers related to the etiology and development of the MetS. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Liquid chromatography coupled to quadrupole-time of flight-MS metabolic profiling was applied to plasma from a 6-month randomized intervention with two sequential periods, a 2-month nutritional-learning intervention period, and a 4-month self-control period, with two energy-restricted diets; the RESMENA diet (based on the Mediterranean dietary pattern) and the Control diet (based on the American Heart Association guidelines), in 72 subjects with a high BMI and at least two features of MetS. The major contributing biomarkers of each sequential period were lipids, mainly phospholipids and lysophospholipids. Dependency network analysis showed a different pattern of associations between metabolic changes and clinical variables after 2 and 6 month of intervention, with a highly interconnected network during the nutritional-learning intervention period of the study.
CONCLUSION: The 2-month RESMENA diet produced significant changes in the plasma metabolic profile of subjects with MetS features. However, at the end of the 6-month study, most of the associations between metabolic and clinical variables disappeared; suggesting that adherence to healthy dietary habits had declined during the self-control period.
© 2015 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Dependency networks; LC-QTOF/MS; Mediterranean diet; Metabolic syndrome; Metabolomics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25641909     DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.201400309

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Nutr Food Res        ISSN: 1613-4125            Impact factor:   5.914


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