| Literature DB >> 33318308 |
Jiwen Geng1, Linghui Deng2,3, Shi Qiu4, Haiyang Bian5, Boyu Cai4, Kun Jin4, Xiaonan Zheng4, Jiakun Li4, Xinyang Liao4, Yupei Li1,6, Jiameng Li1, Zheng Qin1, Zhiwei Cao7, Yige Bao4, Baihai Su1,6.
Abstract
This study used National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys data from 1999 to 2006 to investigate the association between dietary inflammatory potential, represented by dietary inflammatory index (DII) scores, and the risk of sarcopenia in U.S. adults. A total of 25,781 participants were included in the study. The DII scores were calculated based on dietary information collected from 24-hour recalls. Men and women were classified as sarcopenic if appendicular lean mass (ALM) adjusted for BMI (ALMBMI) was <0.789 or <0.512, respectively. The covariates included comorbidities, dietary data, demographic data, and physical examination data. In a full-adjusted model, each unit of increase in DII score was associated with a 12% increase in risk of sarcopenia. When categorizing sarcopenia into tertiles, the adjusted effect size (relative to Tertile1) was 1.26 (95% CI, 1.07, 1.47) for Tertile 2 and 1.55 (95% CI, 1.31, 1.83) for Tertile 3. The trend test showed that the risk of sarcopenia increased with increasing DII tertiles, (P <0.0001). These findings demonstrate that dietary inflammatory potential correlates positively with the risk of sarcopenia and suggest that making ones diet inflammatory may reduce the incidence of sarcopenia and its associated negative health outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: appendicular lean mass; dietary inflammatory index; inflammatory diet; low lean mass; sarcopenia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33318308 PMCID: PMC7880334 DOI: 10.18632/aging.202141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682