Relationship of the Adherence to a Mediterranean Diet and Its Main Components with CRP Levels in the Spanish Population.
Carlos LahozElisa CastilloJose M MostazaOlaya de DiosMiguel A Salinero-FortTeresa González-AlegreFrancisca García-IglesiasEva EstiradoFernando LagunaVanesa SanchezConcesa SabínSilvia LópezVictor CornejoCarmen de BurgosCarmen Garcésnull nullPublished in: Nutrients (2018)
Cross-sectional analysis of 1411 subjects (mean age 61 years, 43.0% males) randomly selected from the general population. CRP levels were determined by a commercial ELISA kit. Adherence to the Mediterranean diet was measured by the 14-point MEDAS. Results: There was an inverse correlation between adherence to the Mediterranean diet and the CRP concentration, even after adjusting by age, gender, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, body mass index, statin treatment and hypertension treatment (p = 0.041). Subjects who consume ≥2 servings of vegetables per day (p = 0.003), ≥3 pieces of fruit per day (p = 0.003), ≥1 serving of butter, margarine, or cream per day (p = 0.041) or ≥3 servings of fish/seafood per week (p = 0.058) had significantly lower levels of CRP. Conclusions: Adherence to a Mediterranean-type diet measured by a simple questionnaire is associated with lower CRP concentration. However, this association seems to be particularly related to a higher consumption of vegetables, fruits, dairy products, and fish.
Keyphrases
- cross sectional
- body mass index
- metabolic syndrome
- blood pressure
- physical activity
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- insulin resistance
- coronary artery disease
- mental health
- health risk
- weight gain
- weight loss
- risk assessment
- replacement therapy
- climate change
- uric acid
- health risk assessment
- patient reported
- psychometric properties
- double blind