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A 14-Item Mediterranean Diet Assessment Tool and Obesity Indexes among High-Risk Subjects: The PREDIMED Trial

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TLDR
A brief 14-item tool was able to capture a strong monotonic inverse association between adherence to a good quality dietary pattern (Mediterranean diet) and obesity indexes in a population of adults at high cardiovascular risk.
Abstract
Objective: Independently of total caloric intake, a better quality of the diet (for example, conformity to the Mediterranean diet) is associated with lower obesity risk. It is unclear whether a brief dietary assessment tool, instead of full-length comprehensive methods, can also capture this association. In addition to reduced costs, a brief tool has the interesting advantage of allowing immediate feedback to participants in interventional studies. Another relevant question is which individual items of such a brief tool are responsible for this association. We examined these associations using a 14-item tool of adherence to the Mediterranean diet as exposure and body mass index, waist circumference and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) as outcomes.

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Alcohol Consumption by Italian and Spanish University Students in Relation to Adherence to the Mediterranean Diet and to the Food Neophobia: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: It is suggested that non-typical MD foods and Saturday night consumptions, related to being far from home, have a great impact on alcohol consumption.
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The psychosocial antecedents of the adherence to the Mediterranean diet

TL;DR: In this article , the authors tested the plausibility of an integrated theoretical model aiming to explain the role of different psychosocial factors in increasing the intention to adhere to the Mediterranean Diet (MeDiet).
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i-Rebound after Stroke-Eat for Health: Mediterranean Dietary Intervention Co-Design Using an Integrated Knowledge Translation Approach and the TIDieR Checklist.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used an Integrated Knowledge Translation (IKT) approach and the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist to co-design and describe a telehealth-delivered diet program for stroke survivors.
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Association of SDF1 and MMP12 with Atherosclerosis and Inflammation: Clinical and Experimental Study.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured SDF1, MMP12 and CRP in blood samples of 298 prospective patients with cardiovascular risk and found increased risk of death in follow-up (HR = 3.2, 95%CI: 1.5-7.0, p = 0.022).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Diet and Lifestyle and Long-Term Weight Gain in Women and Men

TL;DR: Specific dietary and lifestyle factors are independently associated with long-term weight gain, with a substantial aggregate effect and implications for strategies to prevent obesity.
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Weight loss with a low-carbohydrate, Mediterranean, or low-fat diet.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors randomly assigned 322 moderately obese subjects (mean age, 52 years; mean body-mass index [the weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters], 31; male sex, 86%) to one of three diets: low-fat, restricted-calorie; Mediterranean, restricted calorie; or low-carbohydrate, non-restricted calorie.
Journal Article

Effects of a mediterranean-style diet on cardiovascular risk factors. Authors' reply

TL;DR: A large-scale feeding trial in high-risk participants to assess the effects of 2 Mediterranean diets, one supplemented with virgin olive oil and the other supplemented with mixed nuts, compared with a low-fat diet on cardiovascular outcomes.
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A systematic review of waist-to-height ratio as a screening tool for the prediction of cardiovascular disease and diabetes: 0·5 could be a suitable global boundary value

TL;DR: The AUROC analyses indicate that WHtR may be a more useful global clinical screening tool than WC, with a weighted mean boundary value of 0·5, supporting the simple public health message ‘keep your waist circumference to less than half your height’.
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