| Literature DB >> 28583073 |
Jolene Thomas1,2, Lily Chan3, Amanda Wray3, Jacqueline Miller3, Kaye Mehta3, Alison Yaxley3, Kacie Dickinson3, Louisa Matwiejczyk3, Kathryn Jackson3, Michelle Miller3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diet is an important contributor to risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and integral in management and delaying progression. Little is known however about whether increased CVD risk or established CVD has any influence on dietary intakes of Australian adults or children residing in the same household. This study aimed to determine whether the presence of CVD or CVD risk factors influences dietary intake of Australian adults and if the presence of an adult with increased CVD risk influences the dietary intake of a child living in the same household.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Cardiovascular disease; Children; Diet; Nutrients; Sodium
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28583073 PMCID: PMC5460358 DOI: 10.1186/s12872-017-0578-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Fig. 1Selection of adult subjects with cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors* or established CVD** (adult analysis) and children residing in the same household (children analysis) from the total sample of the Australian Health Survey (2011–2013). *CVD risk factors: Diabetes, high sugar level in blood/urine, high cholesterol, hypertensive disease, obese (BMI ≥30 kg/m2), waist circumference ≥ 80 cm in female or ≥94 cm in male. **Established CVD: Angina, Ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular disease, heart failure or other heart disease
Characteristics of adult participants according to their health status, i.e. those with no cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors or established CVD vs. those with at least one CVD risk factor or established CVD) in the National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey, 2011–12
| Characteristics | No risk factor or CVD | Has at least one risk factor and/or CVD ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Male | 1135 (54.7%, 52.6–56.8%) | 2851 (49.1%, 48.1–50.1%) |
|
| Female | 1045 (45.3%, 43.2–47.4%) | 3414 (50.9%, 49.9–51.9%) | |
| Age (Years) | |||
| 18–30 | 804 (47.7%, 45.8–49.5%) | 682 (14.3%, 13.3–15.4%) |
|
| 31–50 | 940 (36.7%, 34.9–38.5%) | 2159 (35.4%, 34.5–36.4%) | |
| 51–70 | 367 (13.4%, 11.9–15.0%) | 2297 (35.4%, 34.3–36.5%) | |
| > 70 | 69 (2.3, 1.7–3.1%) | 1127 (14.9, 14.4–15.3%) | |
| Smoking now | |||
| Current smoker | 441 (18.6%, 16.6%–20.7%) | 1143 (17.4%, 16.2%–18.6%) |
|
| Ex-smoker | 521 (22.3%, 20.3%–24.3%) | 2269 (35.0%, 33.3%–36.7%) | |
| Never smoked | 1218 (59.1%, 56.5%–61.6%) | 2853 (47.7%, 46.1%–49.3%) | |
| SEIFA (Index of Relative Socio-Economic Disadvantage 2011 | |||
| Lowest 20% | 344 (15.2%, 12.5%–18.2%) | 1260 (19.5%, 17.4%–21.8%) |
|
| Second quintile | 373 (17.5%, 15.1%–20.2%) | 1353 (20.8%, 18.9%–22.9%) | |
| Third quintile | 435 (20.2%,17.1%–23.6%) | 1260 (21.4%, 19.3%–23.6%) | |
| Fourth quintile | 399 (19.9%, 16.5%–23.9%) | 1097 (18.3%, 15.9%–20.9%) | |
| Highest 20% | 629 (27.3%, 24.0%–30.9%) | 1295 (20.0%, 18.0%–22.2%) | |
| Consumed total LCN3asupplements supplements a (either | 15.9% (13.9%–18.1%) | 17.8% (16.6%–19.1%) |
|
*Reported to have taken total long chain omega 3 fatty acids (LCN3) supplements on either day 1 or day 2 of survey or on both days
Comparison of usual dietary intake (from food only) between adults with and without CVD/risk factorsa
| Nutrient / Alcohol | Mean (95% Confidence Intervals) | Test statisticsb | |
|---|---|---|---|
| No risk factor or CVD | Has at least one risk factor and/or CVD ( | ||
| Total energy (kJ) | 9351 (9167–9536) | 8521 (8379–8664) | 6.98* |
| Total fat (g) | 80.3 (78.0–82.6) | 72.6 (71.1–74.1) | 5.46* |
| Total fat as percentage of total energy intake (%) | 31.1 (30.6–31.6) | 30.8 (30.5–31.1) | 1.13 |
| Saturated +Trans fat (g) | 31.5 (30.4–32.6) | 28.7 (28.0–29.4) | 4.26* |
| Saturated +Trans fat as percentage of total energy intake (%) | 12.2% (11.9%–12.4%) | 12.1% (11.9%–12.3%) | 0.25 |
| Alpha-linolenic acid (g) | 1.49 (1.44–1.55) | 1.39 (1.35–1.43) | 2.83* |
| Alpha-linolenic acid as percentage of total energy intake (%) | 0.59 (0.57–0.61) | 0.60 (0.59–0.61) | −0.95 |
| Total long chain omega 3 fatty acids (mg) | 257.8 (238.9–276.7) | 247.4 (232.3–262.6) | 0.83 |
| Fibre (g) | 24.2 (23.5–24.9) | 22.5 (22.0–22.9) | 4.22* |
| Fibre (g/MJ of energy) | 2.7 (2.7–2.8) | 2.8 (2.7–2.8) | −1.41 |
| Sodium (mg) | 2576 (2496–2656) | 2418 (2365–2471) | 3.22* |
| Sodium (mg/MJ of energy) | 284 (279–290) | 292 (288–297) | −2.22* |
| Standard drink (10 g of alcohol per drink) | 1.3 (0.7–1.9) | 1.7 (1.1–2.2) | −0.79 |
a Usual intake estimated from two 24-h dietary recalls, adjusted for sequence (from personal interview or telephone interview), day of week (weekdays, Mon to Fri; or weekend days, Sat and Sun), age groups (18; 19–30; 31–50; 51–70, or >70 years), gender, SEIFA quintiles (where 1st quintile was the lowest 20% and 5th quintile was the highest 20%), smoking status (current smoker, ex-smoker, never smoked)
b If the test statistic was <−1.96 or >1.96, the difference between the two groups was considered significant at the α = 0.05 level and marked with an asterisk
Proportiona of adults with and without CVD/risk who meet recommendations according to the NH&MRCb guidelines
| Nutrient / Alcohol | Recommended intake (per day on average) | Proportion (95% CI) meeting recommendations | Test statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No risk factor or CVD | Has at least one risk factor +/− CVD | |||
| Total fat | 20–35% of total energy intake | 82.1% (78.3%–86.0%) | 83.9% (80.9%–87.0%) | −0.72 |
| Sat fat + | ≤10% of total energy intake | 18.9% (15.1%–22.8%) | 19.6% (16.9%–22.3%) | -0.28 |
| ALA | 0.4–1% of total energy intake | 86.6% (82.7%–90.5%) | 87.6% (84.1%–91.1%) | −0.35 |
| LCn-3PUFA | Male 610 mg | 4.8% (2.6%–7.1%) | 4.3% (2.1%–6.4%) | 0.34 |
| Fibre | Male 38 g | 13.4% (11.3%–15.5%) | 9.9% (8.4%–11.4%) | 2.60* |
| Sodium | ≤1600 mg/day | 7.8% (5.7%–9.8%) | 11.9% (9.6%–14.2%) | −2.59* |
| Standard drinks | ≤2 standard drinks | 76.1% (64.4%–87.8%) | 70.6% (61.0%–80.1%) | 0.72 |
a Proportion estimated from two 24-h dietary recalls and from food intake only, adjusted for sequence (from personal interview or telephone interview), day of week (weekdays, Mon to Fri; or weekend days, Sat and Sun), age groups (18; 19–30; 31–50; 51–70, or >70 years), gender, SEIFA quintiles (where 1st quintile was the lowest 20% and 5th quintile was the highest 20%), smoking status (current smoker, ex-smoker, never smoked)
b Recommendation according the NH&MRC, Optimising diets for lowering chronic disease risk (AMDR – Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range; SDT – Suggested Dietary Targets) and for alcohol, national guidelines for alcohol consumption where one standard drink equals to 10 g of pure alcohol
c If the test statistic was <−1.96 or >1.96, the difference between the two groups was considered significant at the α = 0.05 level and marked with an asterisk
Characteristics of children participants according to their living environment, i.e. those from household with adults known to have cardiovascular disease (CVD) or risk factor vs. those without, in the National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey, 2011–12
| Characteristics | Children living in CVD households | Other children |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| n (weighted %, 95% CI) | n (weighted %, 95% CI) | ||
| Gender | |||
| Boy | 833 (53.0%, 51.4%–54.7%) | 540 (48.8%, 46.3%–51.3%) | =0.045 |
| Girl | 776 (47.0%, 45.3%–48.7%) | 569 (51.2%, 48.8%–53.7%) | |
| Age (Years) | |||
| 2–3 | 261 (11.8%, 10.1%–13.6%) | 203 (13.7%, 11.7%–15.9%) | =0.189 |
| 4–8 | 461 (29.4%, 26.4%–32.7%) | 328 (32.4%, 28.5%–36.5%) | |
| 9–13 | 495 (36.1%, 32.7%–39.7%) | 292 (30.9%, 27.1%–35.0%) | |
| 14–17 | 392 (22.7%, 20.3%–25.3%) | 286 (23.1%, 20.5%–25.9%) | |
Comparison of usual dietary intakea (from food only) in children between those from household with adults known to have cardiovascular disease (CVD) or risk factor vs. those without (other children)
| Nutrient | Mean (95% Confidence Intervals) | Test Statisticsb | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children living in households with known adults with CVD or CVD risk factors | Other children | ||
| Total fat as a % of total energy intake | 31.1% (30.6–31.6%) | 31.1% (30.6%–31.7%) | −0.02 |
| Saturated fat + | 13.7% (13.4%–14.0%) | 13.7% (13.3%–14.1%) | 0.20 |
| Alpha-linolenic acid | 1.11 (1.06–1.17) | 1.13 (1.08–1.18) | 0.40 |
| Total long chain omega 3 fatty acids | 115.8 (107.7–124.0) | 125.7 (113.4–138.1) | 1.31 |
| Fibre | 19.5 (18.9–20.1) | 19.6 (19.0–20.3) | 0.30 |
| Sodium | 2300 (2222–2378) | 2259 (2187–2331) | −0.75 |
a Usual intake estimated from two 24-h dietary recalls, adjusted for sequence (from personal interview or telephone interview), day of week (weekdays, Mon to Fri; or weekend days, Sat and Sun), age groups (18; 19–30; 31–50; 51–70, or >70 years) and gender
b All test statistics were either > − 1.96 or <1.96, therefore none of the differences between the two groups were considered significant at the α = 0.05 level
Proportiona of children who met recommendations according to the NH&MRCb guidelines
| Nutrient | Recommended intake (per day on average) | Proportion (95% CI) meeting recommendations | Test Statistics | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children living in households with known adults with CVD or CVD risk factors | Other children | |||
| Total fat | 20–35% of total energy intake | 90.1% (84.9%–95.2%) | 90.1% (85.1%–95.0%) | 0.003 |
| Sat fat + | ≤10% of total energy intake | 3.2% (0.9%–5.6%) | 3.0% (0.6%–5.5%) | -0.11 |
| ALA | 1–3 years 0.5 g | 80.8% (74.2%–87.5%) | 83.1% (76.2%–90.0%) | 0.47 |
| Total LC N3 | 1–3 years 40 mg | 89.2% (81.0%–97.5%) | 93.4% (85.6%–100.0%) | 0.72 |
| Fibre | 1–3 years 14 g | 40.8% (36.7%–44.9%) | 43.6% (39.0%–48.1%) | 0.88 |
| Sodium | 1–3 1000 mg | 17.5% (12.5%–22.5%) | 17.2% (12.4%–22.0%) | −0.08 |
a Proportion estimated from two 24-h dietary recalls and from food intake only, adjusted for sequence (from personal interview or telephone interview), day of week (weekdays, Mon to Fri; or weekend days, Sat and Sun), age groups (18; 19–30; 31–50; 51–70, or >70 years), gender, SEIFA quintiles (where 1st quintile was the lowest 20% and 5th quintile was the highest 20%), smoking status (current smoker, ex-smoker, never smoked)
b Recommendation according the NH&MRC, Optimising diets for lowering chronic disease risk (AMDR – Acceptable Macronutrient Distribution Range for total fat, saturated plus trans fat); adequate intake (AI) for total long chain omega 3 fatty acids (LCN3) and fibre; upper level of intake (UL) for sodium
c All test statistics were either > − 1.96 or <1.96, therefore none of the differences between the two groups were considered significant at the α = 0.05 level