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Vijay, Amrita; Al-Awadi, Amina; Chalmers, Jane; Balakumaran, Leena; Grove, Jane I; Valdes, Ana M; Taylor, Moira A; Shenoy, Kotacherry T; Aithal, Guruprasad P
Development of food group tree-based analysis and its association with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and co-morbidities in a south Indian population: A large case-control study Journal Article
In: Nutrients, vol. 14, no. 14, pp. 2808, 2022.
Abstract | Tags: case-control, co-morbidities, dietary factors, food groups, NAFLD, South Asians
@article{Vijay2022-jr,
title = {Development of food group tree-based analysis and its
association with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and
co-morbidities in a south Indian population: A large
case-control study},
author = {Amrita Vijay and Amina Al-Awadi and Jane Chalmers and Leena Balakumaran and Jane I Grove and Ana M Valdes and Moira A Taylor and Kotacherry T Shenoy and Guruprasad P Aithal},
year = {2022},
date = {2022-07-01},
journal = {Nutrients},
volume = {14},
number = {14},
pages = {2808},
publisher = {MDPI AG},
abstract = {BACKGROUND: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a
global problem growing in parallel to the epidemics of obesity
and diabetes, with South Asians being particularly susceptible.
Nutrition and behaviour are important modifiers of the disease;
however, studies to date have only described dietary patterns
and nutrients associated with susceptibility to NAFLD. METHODS:
This cross-sectional case-control study included 993 NAFLD
patients and 973 healthy controls from Trivandrum (India).
Dietary data was collected using a locally validated food
frequency questionnaire. A tree-based classification categorised
2165 ingredients into three levels (food groups, sub-types, and
cooking methods) and intakes were associated with clinical
outcomes. RESULTS: NAFLD patients had significantly higher
consumption of refined rice, animal fat, red meat, refined
sugar, and fried foods, and had lower consumption of vegetables,
pulses, nuts, seeds, and milk compared to controls. The
consumption of red meat, animal fat, nuts, and refined rice was
positively associated with NAFLD diagnosis and the presence of
fibrosis, whereas consumption of leafy vegetables, fruits, and
dried pulses was negatively associated. Fried food consumption
was positively associated with NAFLD, whilst boiled food
consumption had a negative association. Increased consumption of
animal fats was associated with diabetes, hypertension, and
cardiovascular outcomes among those with NAFLD, whereas
consumption of wholegrain rice was negatively associated with
these clinical-related outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: The tree-based
approach provides the first comprehensive method of classifying
food intakes to enable the identification of specific dietary
factors associated with NAFLD and related clinical outcomes.
This could inform culturally sensitive dietary guidelines to
reduce risk of NAFLD development and/or its progression.},
keywords = {case-control, co-morbidities, dietary factors, food groups, NAFLD, South Asians},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
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