Association of diet quality and weight increase in adult heart transplant recipients
Name:
J Human Nutrition Diet - 2023 - ...
Size:
462.4Kb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Found with Open Access Button
Affiliation
CRUK Manchester Institute and University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.Issue Date
2023
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding the quality of the diet of heart transplant recipients (HTRs) is essential to developing effective dietary interventions for weight control, but relevant evidence is scarce. We investigated diet quality and its association with post-transplant increase in weight adjusted for height (body mass index [BMI]) in Australian HTRs. METHODS: We recruited adult HTRs from Queensland's thoracic transplant clinic, 2020-2021. Study participants completed a 3-day food diary using a smart-phone app. Socio-demographic information was collected by self-administered questionnaire, and height, serial weight and clinical information were obtained from medical records. We calculated the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) index based on nine food groups and nutrients (index of 90 indicates highest possible quality), and any changes in BMI (≤ 0 kg m(-2) or >0 kg m(-2) ) post-transplantation. Median DASH index values were assessed in relation to sex and BMI change using Mann-Whitney U test. RESULTS: Among 49 consented HTRs, 25 (51%) completed the food diary (median age 48 years, 52% females). Median BMI at enrolment was 27.2 kg m(-2) ; median BMI change since transplant was +3.7 kg m(-2) . Fruit, vegetable, and whole grain intakes were generally lower than recommended, giving a low overall median DASH index of 30 with no sex differences. HTRs for which the BMI increased post-transplant had significantly lower median DASH indices than those whose BMI did not increase (30 vs. 45, p = 0.013). CONCLUSIONS: The diet quality of HTRs appears suboptimal overall, with fruit and vegetable intakes especially low. HTRs whose BMI increased post-transplant had substantially lower quality diets than HTRs whose BMI did not increase.Citation
Miura K, Yu R, Entwistle TR, McKenzie SC, Green AC. Association of diet quality and weight increase in adult heart transplant recipients. Journal of human nutrition and dietetics : the official journal of the British Dietetic Association. 2023 Nov 24. PubMed PMID: 37997547. Epub 2023/11/24. eng.Journal
Journal of Human Nutrition and DieteticsDOI
10.1111/jhn.13263PubMed ID
37997547Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jhn.13263Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/jhn.13263