Associations between Dietary Antioxidant Intake and Metabolic Syndrome

PLoS ONE
Q1
Jun 2015
Citations:70
Influential Citations:3
Observational Studies (Human)
83
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Cross-sectional study of 2069 Chinese adults (1109 men, 960 women) aged 18–84 undergoing regular health examinations; dietary antioxidant intake assessed with a semi-quantitative FFQ.
Results
Vitamin C intake is inversely associated with metabolic syndrome, significant in the second and highest quartiles (energy-adjusted ORs ~0.64–0.65; multivariable-adjusted ORs ~0.60–0.64; P values for trend 0.02 and 0.08). Selenium intake shows a moderate inverse association in the second quartile (energy-adjusted OR 0.60; 95% CI 0.43–0.85; P=0.00; multivariable OR 0.60; 95% CI 0.43–0.86; P=0.01). Carotenoids and vitamin E intake show no significant associations with MS. Conclusion: Higher dietary vitamin C and selenium intake are associated with lower odds of metabolic syndrome in this population; carotenoid and vitamin E intake show no association.
Limitations
Cross-sectional design cannot establish causality; dietary intake assessed by FFQ with modest validity; no biomarker measurements of antioxidant status; potential residual confounding.

Abstract

Background The objective of this study was to evaluate the association between dietary antioxidant intake (carotenoid, vitamin C, E and selenium) intake and metabolic syndrome (MS). Method This cross-sectional study included 2069 subjects undergoing ...