Metabolic syndrome improvement in depression six months after prescribing simple hygienic-dietary recommendations.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine if lifestyle recommendations, including sleep restriction, could improve both depressive symptoms and metabolic profiles in patients with depression.
Results Summary
The study found that patients receiving hygienic-dietary recommendations, including sleep restriction, showed fewer cases of metabolic syndrome at six months compared to the control group, suggesting combined lifestyle interventions may benefit mental and physical health.
Population
Depressive patients, some with metabolic syndrome at baseline.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Six months
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
changes in diet | increase | Depression | - | - | improve | #1 |
exercise | increase | Depression | - | - | improve | #2 |
lifestyle measures (sleep restriction and sunlight exposure) in combination | increase | depressive symptoms | patients | - | experienced improvements | #3 |
hygienic-dietary recommendations | decrease | MetS criteria | patients | - | a smaller number of patients met MetS criteria | #4 |
costless lifestyle recommendations, such as exercise and Mediterranean diet | increase | mental and physical health | depressive patients | - | have the capacity to promote | #5 |
BACKGROUND: Changes in diet and exercise have been separately demonstrated to improve Depression, although scientific evidence available is scarce. In a previously published controlled study, just recommending these and other lifestyle measures (sleep restriction and sunlight exposure) in combination once, patients experienced improvements in their depressive symptoms six months later. In this sample, one in three depressive patients had metabolic syndrome (MetS) at baseline. First line treatment of MetS condition is hygienic-dietetic, being Mediterranean diet and exercise especially important. Therefore we analyzed if lifestyle recommendations also improved their metabolic profile. FINDINGS: During the sixth month evaluation, a smaller number of patients from the group receiving hygienic-dietary recommendations met MetS criteria comparing with the control group. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that costless lifestyle recommendations, such as exercise and Mediterranean diet, have the capacity to promote both mental and physical health in a significant proportion of depressive patients. Further research is needed to confirm or discard these preliminary findings.