The role of dietary habits as risk factor for the development of diverticular complications has strongly emerged in the last years. We aimed to evaluate possible differences in dietary habits between patients with diverticular disease (DD) and matched controls without diverticula. Dietary habits were obtained from standardized food frequency questionnaires collected at entry to the Diverticular Disease Registry (REMAD). We compared controls (C) (n = 119) with asymptomatic diverticulosis (D) (n = 344), symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) (n = 154) and previous diverticulitis (PD) (n = 83) patients, in terms of daily calories, macro and micronutrients and dietary vitamins. Daily kcal intake and lipids, both saturated and unsaturated, were significantly lower in patients with DD than C. Total protein consumption was lower in PD than D, with differing consumption of unprocessed red meat, white meat and eggs between groups. Consumption of fibre, both soluble and insoluble, was lower in patients with PD compared to patients with SUDD, D and C, whereas dietary vitamins A, C, D and E and Oxygen Radical Adsorbance Capacity index were lower in all DD groups compared to C. This observational study showed that DD patients have different dietary habits, mainly in terms of caloric, fat, fibre and vitamin intake, compared to control subjects.
Patients with diverticular disease have different dietary habits compared to control subjects: results from an observational italian study / Polese, B; Carabotti, M; Rurgo, S; Ritieni, C; Sarnelli, G; Barbara, G; Pace, F; Cuomo, R; Annibale, B; Bachetti, Francesco; Bargiggia, Stefano; Bassotti, Gabrio; Maria Erminia Bottiglieri, ; Ciacci, Carolina; Colecchia, Antonio; Agostino Di Ciaula, ; Festa, Virginia; Festi, Davide; Grassini, Mario; Guido, Ennio; Iafrate, Franco; Iovino, Paola; Iuliano, Donato; Laghi, Andrea; Latella, Giovanni; Manes, Gianpiero; Marabotto, Elisa; Neri, Matteo; Parravicini, Marco; Pennazio, Marco; Portincasa, Piero; Reati, Raffaella; Rossi, Marco; Savarino, Vincenzo; Scaccianoce, Giuseppe; Segato, Sergio; Severi, Carola; Usai, Paolo; Viscido, Angelo. - In: NUTRIENTS. - ISSN 2072-6643. - 15:9(2023). [10.3390/nu15092119]
Patients with diverticular disease have different dietary habits compared to control subjects: results from an observational italian study
Carabotti M
Co-primo
;Ritieni C;Annibale B;Franco Iafrate;Andrea Laghi;Carola Severi;
2023
Abstract
The role of dietary habits as risk factor for the development of diverticular complications has strongly emerged in the last years. We aimed to evaluate possible differences in dietary habits between patients with diverticular disease (DD) and matched controls without diverticula. Dietary habits were obtained from standardized food frequency questionnaires collected at entry to the Diverticular Disease Registry (REMAD). We compared controls (C) (n = 119) with asymptomatic diverticulosis (D) (n = 344), symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD) (n = 154) and previous diverticulitis (PD) (n = 83) patients, in terms of daily calories, macro and micronutrients and dietary vitamins. Daily kcal intake and lipids, both saturated and unsaturated, were significantly lower in patients with DD than C. Total protein consumption was lower in PD than D, with differing consumption of unprocessed red meat, white meat and eggs between groups. Consumption of fibre, both soluble and insoluble, was lower in patients with PD compared to patients with SUDD, D and C, whereas dietary vitamins A, C, D and E and Oxygen Radical Adsorbance Capacity index were lower in all DD groups compared to C. This observational study showed that DD patients have different dietary habits, mainly in terms of caloric, fat, fibre and vitamin intake, compared to control subjects.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
Polese_Patients with_2023 .pdf
accesso aperto
Note: nutrients-15-02119-with-cover
Tipologia:
Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
604.43 kB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
604.43 kB | Adobe PDF |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.