| Literature DB >> 30244379 |
Suocheng Hui1, Kai Liu1,2, Hedong Lang1, Yang Liu1, Xiaolan Wang1, Xiaohui Zhu1, Steve Doucette3, Long Yi1, Mantian Mi4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The comparative effects of different whole grains and brans on blood lipid are still not totally elucidated. We aimed to estimate and rank the effects of different whole grains and brans on the control of blood lipid.Entities:
Keywords: Blood lipid; Bran; Network meta-analysis; Whole grain
Year: 2018 PMID: 30244379 PMCID: PMC6769090 DOI: 10.1007/s00394-018-1827-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nutr ISSN: 1436-6207 Impact factor: 5.614
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing the number of citations retrieved in individual searches of articles included in the review
Fig. 2Network plots of eligible comparisons for different whole grains and brans for TC (a), LDL-C (b), HDL-C (c) and TG (d). Lines connect the interventions that have been studied in head-to-head (direct) comparisons in the eligible studies. The sizes of the nodes are weighted according to the number of trials that study the intervention, and the thickness line corresponds to the number of trials that assess direct comparisons between different interventions
Fig. 3Ranking results of different whole grains and brans on the control of blood lipid. The x-axis represents the ranking of interventions which are ranked in numerical order, with the first representing the best. The y-axis represents the probability of each ranking. Each line indicates a type of intervention strategy
Fig. 4Comparison-adjusted funnel plots for TC (a), LDL-C (b), HDL-C (c) and TG (d). The red line represents the null hypothesis that the study-specific effect sizes do not differ from the respective comparison-specific pooled effect estimates. The two black dashed lines represent a 95% CI for the difference between study-specific effect sizes and comparison-specific summary estimates. Different colors correspond to different comparisons