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Source: The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Condition: Coronary Heart Disease
Nutrition: Diets

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Total 5 results found since Jan 2013.

Mushroom consumption, biomarkers, and risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes: a prospective cohort study of US women and men.
CONCLUSIONS: We found no association of mushroom consumption with biomarkers and risks of CVD and T2D in US adults. More large prospective cohort studies are warranted to investigate this association in other racial/ethnic groups. PMID: 31172167 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition - June 6, 2019 Category: Nutrition Authors: Lee DH, Yang M, Giovannucci EL, Sun Q, Chavarro JE Tags: Am J Clin Nutr Source Type: research

Diet quality as a predictor of cardiometabolic disease-free life expectancy: the Whitehall II cohort study.
CONCLUSIONS: Healthier dietary habits are associated with cardiometabolic disease-free life expectancy between ages 50 and 85. PMID: 31927573 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition - January 10, 2020 Category: Nutrition Authors: Lagström H, Stenholm S, Akbaraly T, Pentti J, Vahtera J, Kivimäki M, Head J Tags: Am J Clin Nutr Source Type: research

A gene-diet interaction-based score predicts response to dietary fat in the Women's Health Initiative.
CONCLUSIONS: These results lay the foundation for the combination of many genome-wide gene-diet interactions for diet response prediction while highlighting the need for further research and larger samples in order to achieve robust biomarkers for use in personalized nutrition. PMID: 32135010 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition - March 4, 2020 Category: Nutrition Authors: Westerman K, Liu Q, Liu S, Parnell LD, Sebastiani P, Jacques P, DeMeo DL, Ordovás JM Tags: Am J Clin Nutr Source Type: research

Healthy dietary patterns and risk of cardiovascular disease in US Hispanics/Latinos: the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL)
CONCLUSIONS: Although adherence to healthy eating patterns varies by Hispanic/Latino backgrounds and generations, greater adherence to these eating patterns is associated with lower risk of CVD across diverse US Hispanics/Latinos.PMID:36041183 | DOI:10.1093/ajcn/nqac199
Source: The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition - August 30, 2022 Category: Nutrition Authors: Yi-Yun Chen Guo-Chong Chen Nathaniel Abittan Jiaqian Xing Yasmin Mossavar-Rahmani Daniela Sotres-Alvarez Josiemer Mattei Martha Daviglus Carmen R Isasi Frank B Hu Robert Kaplan Qibin Qi Source Type: research