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[Preprint]. 2023 Feb 10:2023.02.09.23285714. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.02.09.23285714

Association of Healthy Dietary Patterns and Cardiorespiratory Fitness in the Community

Michael Y Mi, Priya Gajjar, Maura E Walker, Patricia Miller, Vanessa Xanthakis, Venkatesh L Murthy, Martin G Larson, Ramachandran S Vasan, Ravi V Shah, Gregory D Lewis, Matthew Nayor
PMCID: PMC9934801  PMID: 36798343

Abstract

Aims

To evaluate the associations of dietary indices and quantitative CRF measures in a large, community-based sample harnessing metabolomic profiling to interrogate shared biology.

Methods

Framingham Heart Study (FHS) participants underwent maximum effort cardiopulmonary exercise tests for CRF quantification (via peak VO 2 ) and completed semi-quantitative FFQs. Dietary quality was assessed by the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) and Mediterranean-style Diet Score (MDS), and fasting blood concentrations of 201 metabolites were quantified.

Results

In 2380 FHS participants (54±9 years, 54% female, BMI 28±5 kg/m 2 ), 1-SD higher AHEI and MDS were associated with 5.1% (1.2 ml/kg/min, p<0.0001) and 4.4% (1.0 ml/kg/min, p<0.0001) greater peak VO 2 in linear models adjusted for age, sex, total energy intake, cardiovascular risk factors, and physical activity. In participants with metabolite profiling (N=1154), 24 metabolites were concordantly associated with both dietary indices and peak VO 2 in multivariable-adjusted linear models (FDR<5%). These metabolites included C6 and C7 carnitines, C16:0 ceramide, and dimethylguanidino valeric acid, which were higher with lower CRF and poorer dietary quality and are known markers of insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk. Conversely, C38:7 phosphatidylcholine plasmalogen and C38:7 and C40:7 phosphatidylethanolamine plasmalogens were associated with higher CRF and favorable dietary quality and may link to lower cardiometabolic risk.

Conclusion

Higher diet quality is associated with greater CRF cross-sectionally in a middle-aged community-dwelling sample, and metabolites highlight potential shared favorable effects on health.

Full Text Availability

The license terms selected by the author(s) for this preprint version do not permit archiving in PMC. The full text is available from the preprint server.


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