Publisher DOI: 10.1024/0301-1526/a001005
Title: A cross-sectional survey study on the nutrition patterns of patients with peripheral artery disease
Language: English
Authors: Wolbert, Lara 
Kreutzburg, Thea 
Zyriax, Birgit-Christiane 
Adegbola, Abiodun 
Westenhöfer, Joachim  
Jagemann, Bettina 
Neumann, Felix Alexander 
Preuß, Mark 
Debus, E. Sebastian 
Rieß, Henrik C. 
Behrendt, Christian-Alexander 
Keywords: Mediterranean Diet score; Nutrition; health services research; intermittent claudication; lifestyle advice; peripheral artery disease
Issue Date: 2-May-2022
Publisher: Hogrefe
Journal or Series Name: Vasa : European journal of vascular medicine 
Volume: 51
Issue: 4
Startpage: 239
Endpage: 246
Abstract: 
Background: Even though nutrition was demonstrated to have an impact on chronic atherosclerotic disease, there is a paucity of corresponding recommendations for patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). A Mediterranean Diet based on daily intake of fruits and vegetables with high fibre, vegetable oil, and unsalted nuts including fish several times a week may have protective effects. This cross-sectional survey aimed to determine nutritional patterns amongst inpatients with PAD. Methods: All inpatients with symptomatic PAD who underwent revascularisation at a single centre between 1st May 2018 and 31st December 2021 were asked to fill out a questionnaire on nutritional intake. An 8-item frequency rating scale (from never to three times a day) was used for 15 food groups. For 11 of them, an adapted Mediterranean Diet score was calculated using the answers. The descriptive results were stratified by sex and disease stage (intermittent claudication vs. chronic limb-threatening ischaemia). Results: A total of 319 patients (31.7% female, 69.4 years in mean) were included. Thereof, 71.8% reported they did never receive any nutritional information considering their PAD disease. The mean adapted Mediterranean Diet score was 2.7 points (of maximum 11) with most patients not achieving the recommended servings per week for fruits (1.6%), vegetables (1.0%), and unsalted nuts (12.2%). The intake of cereals was sufficient (43.3%). When compared with men, women consumed more fruits and less meat. Conclusions: This survey demonstrated that although healthy nutrition may have a positive impact on patients with PAD, the education and adherence to a Mediterranean Diet was inappropriate. Nutritional patterns should be more focused in future PAD studies to derive specific recommendations and nutritional programmes as well as patient education in clinical practice.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/13004
ISSN: 1664-2872
Institute: Department Gesundheitswissenschaften 
Competence Center Gesundheit 
Fakultät Life Sciences 
Type: Article
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