Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Kambayashi Yasuhiro
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 5000036919
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Higher Intake of Vegetable Protein and Lower Intake of Animal Fats Reduce the Incidence of Diabetes in Non-Drinking Males: A Prospective Epidemiological Analysis of the Shika Study

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Aya Ogawa  1   2 , Hiromasa Tsujiguchi  1   3   4 , Masaharu Nakamura  3 , Koichi Hayashi  3   5 , Akinori Hara  1   3   4 , Keita Suzuki  3 , Sakae Miyagi  6 , Takayuki Kannon  7 , Chie Takazawa  3 , Jiaye Zhao  1 , Yasuhiro Kambayashi  3   8 , Yukari Shimizu  9 , Aki Shibata  3 , Tadashi Konoshita  10 , Fumihiko Suzuki  3   11 , Hirohito Tsuboi  3   12 , Atsushi Tajima  13 , Hiroyuki Nakamura  1   3   4

Summary

Although nutrient intake and alcohol consumption are both closely associated with the incidence of diabetes, their interrelationships remain unclear. Therefore, we herein have investigated the interrelationships among nutrient intake, alcohol consumption, and the incidence of diabetes using longitudinal data. This study included 969 residents ≥40 years living in Japan. In 2011 and 2012, a baseline study was conducted using questionnaires on basic demographics, diabetes, nutrient intake, and lifestyle habits. In 2018 and 2019, a follow-up study was performed using questionnaires and medical records on diabetes. Two-way analysis of covariance (two-way ANCOVA) was used to test the interactions of drinking habits and diabetes incidence on nutrients intake. The prospective relationship between nutrient intake at baseline and the incidence of diabetes in the follow-up stratified by drinkers and non-drinkers was evaluated using multiple logistic regression analysis. Interactions were observed for vegetable protein intake (p = 0.023) and animal fat intake (p = 0.016) in males. Vegetable protein intake negatively correlated with the incidence of diabetes in non-drinkers (odds ratio (OR): 0.208; 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 0.046-0.935; p = 0.041). Furthermore, animal fat intake positively correlated with the incidence of diabetes in non-drinkers (OR: 1.625; 95% CI: 1.020-2.589; p = 0.041). Therefore, vegetable protein and animal fat intakes in combination with drinking habits need to be considered for the prevention of diabetes.
Keywords: animal fat; diabetes; drinking; vegetable protein.

Magazine(name)

Nutrients

Publisher

Volume

14

Number Of Pages

24

StartingPage

5225

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2022/12

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