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Food and nutrient intakes and asthma risk in young adults

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 14:24 authored by Woods, RK, Eugene WaltersEugene Walters, Raven, JM, Wolfe, R, Ireland, PD, Thien, FCK, Abramson, MJ
Background: Some aspects of diet are relatively newly recognized potential risk factors for asthma, but the evidence to date is conflicting. Objective: The goal was to determine whether the food and nutrient intakes of adults with asthma differ from those of adults without asthma. Design: This was a community-based, cross-sectional study of 1601 young adults (x̄ ± SD age: 34.6 ± 7.1 y) who were initially recruited by random selection from the federal electoral rolls in Melbourne in 1999. Subjects completed a detailed respiratory questionnaire, a validated semiquantitative food-frequency questionnaire, skin-prick testing, and lung function tests, including a methacholine challenge test for bronchial hyperreactivity (BHR). A total of 25 nutrients and 47 food groups were analyzed by using multiple logistic regression with alternate definitions of asthma and atopy as the outcomes. Results: Whole milk appeared to protect against current asthma (odds ratio: 0.66; 95% CI: 0.46, 0.97), doctor-diagnosed asthma (0.73; 0.54, 0.99), BHR (0.68; 0.48, 0.92), and atopy (0.71; 0.54, 0.94). Conversely, soy beverage was associated with an increased risk of current asthma (2.05; 1.19; 3.53), doctor-diagnosed asthma (1.69; 1.04, 2.77), and BHR (1.65; 1.00, 2.71). Apples and pears appeared to protect against current asthma (0.83; 0.71, 0.98), asthma (0.88; 0.78, 1.00), and BHR (0.88; 0.77, 1.00). Conclusions: The consumption of dairy products, soy beverages, and apples and pears, but not of nutrients per se, was associated with a range of asthma definitions. Dietary modification after diagnosis is one possible explanation for this finding. Intervention studies using whole foods are required to ascertain whether such modifications of food intake could be beneficial in the prevention or amelioration of asthma.

History

Publication title

American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Volume

78

Pagination

414-421

ISSN

0002-9165

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Nutrition

Place of publication

USA

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Clinical health not elsewhere classified

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