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Associations of the MIND Diet with Cardiometabolic Diseases and Their Risk Factors: A Systematic Review.

Diabetes, metabolic syndrome and obesity : targets and therapy
May 5, 2023
Zoha Akbar et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the potential of the MIND diet to provide protection against cardiometabolic diseases and associated risk factors in adults.

Results Summary

The MIND diet was generally associated with improvements in anthropometric measures and cardiometabolic outcomes like blood pressure, glycemic control, lipid profile, inflammation, and stroke, though effects on some cardiovascular diseases were less conclusive.

Population

Adults

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (8)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
MIND diet
decrease
anthropometric measures
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#1
MIND diet
decrease
blood pressure
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#2
MIND diet
improvement
glycemic control
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#3
MIND diet
improvement
lipid profile
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#4
MIND diet
decrease
inflammation
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#5
MIND diet
decrease
stroke
adults
-
associated with an improvement
#6
MIND diet
no change
some cardiovascular diseases
adults
-
effects are less conclusive
#7
MIND diet
decrease
cardiometabolic risk
adults
-
support the recommendation as a strategy to reduce
#8
Abstract

PURPOSE: Recent studies have expanded the scope of research on the Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diet beyond its impact on cognitive performance. These investigations have specifically explored its potential to provide protection against cardiometabolic diseases and associated risk factors, including obesity and dyslipidemia. METHODS: We systematically summarized and evaluated all existing observational and trial evidence for the MIND diet in relation to cardiometabolic diseases and their risk factors in adults. PubMed, Embase, CINAHL and Cochrane Library databases were systematically searched to extract original studies on humans published until September 2023, without date restrictions. A total of 491 studies were initially retrieved, out of which 23 met the eligibility criteria and were included in the final review. Duplicated and irrelevant studies were screened out by five independent reviewers using the Rayyan platform. Quality assessment was ascertained using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale for observational studies and the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool (RoB 2) for randomized trials. RESULTS: Across the different study designs, the MIND diet was generally associated with an improvement in anthropometric measures and other cardiometabolic outcomes, such as blood pressure, glycemic control, lipid profile, inflammation and stroke. The effects of the MIND eating pattern on some cardiovascular diseases are less conclusive. CONCLUSION: The findings of this systematic review support the recommendation of the MIND diet as a strategy to reduce cardiometabolic risk in adults. Further well-designed and long-term studies are warranted.

Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations13
Citations/Year6.5
Relative Citation Ratio3.30
NIH Percentile86.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.99
Normalized Score0.67
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