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2.
Arch. latinoam. nutr ; 51(2): 113-121, jun. 2001.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-333740

ABSTRACT

Surgical Eye-camps for cataract treatment of low-income adult Mexicans have been undertaken over the last 10 years. Despite the high prevalence of cataracts among these subjects, no assessment of their nutritional or health status has ever been made. We compare the results obtained for 81 adults (44 men and 37 women) who received treatment in May 1997 with those for a "control" group of age and sex-matched but affluent individuals in Mexico City. alpha-Tocopherol and beta-carotene were assessed and analysed by HPLC and colorimetric procedures, respectively. The plasma tocopherol to cholesterol ratio did not reveal deficiencies of this vitamin, and only 5 patients (2 men and 3 women) had low beta-carotene plasma levels. The patients had high BMI values, with 32 of men and 30 of women overweight, and 2 and 14, respectively, obese, with higher glucose, cholesterol and triglyceride values reflecting enhanced insulin resistance and lipid abnormalities. The alkaline phosphatase values were elevated suggesting that many of these blind patients are osteomalacic because they now remain indoors. Although it has been suggested that an adequate intake of carotenes and tocopherol are associated with absence of cataract, this appears not to be the case in our study population. Surveys in Mexico have revealed, however, a highly prevalent deficiency of other vitamins such as niacin and riboflavin, both of which have been proved to be protective against cataract. It appears that nutritional deficiencies, obesity, incipient diabetes and lipid disorders co-exist in modern Mexico. We have identified a need for research to aid the design of preventive nutritional approaches at the population level that could be applied in parallel with ongoing surgical treatment.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , alpha-Tocopherol , Carotenoids , Cataract , Nutritional Status , Anthropometry , beta Carotene , Case-Control Studies , Cataract , Cataract Extraction , Cross-Sectional Studies , Mexico , Poverty
3.
Arch. med. res ; 27(4): 559-66, 1996. tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-200363

ABSTRACT

A selected group of 155 Mexican adults aged 20 - 64 years were studied to investigate the role of sodium(Na) intake in explaining blood pressure (BP) differences in a rural town and urban Mexico City. The subjects had their BP, height, weight and skinfolds measured and they collected 3 continuous 24 h urines. Adjusted for age differences, average BPs were significantly higher (p<.05) for the urban (112.7 systolic: 73.6 diastolic mmHg) than for the rural group (108.4 systolic: 70.8 diastolic mmHg). They were also higher for men (111.8 systolic: 74.3 diastolic mmHg) than for women (109.6 systolic: 70.2 distolic mmHg), the diastolic BP difference being significant (p<0.05). The average daily Na excretion was also higher in the urban (122.2 mmol/day) than in the rural community (98.0 mmol/day) (p<0.01). Potassium excretion rate showed similar differences in sodium excretion and blood pressure among communities were particularly marked in those over 30 years of age. The means for the four community-sex groups had the same rank order for both BP and Na. However, although some large surveys have suggested that half the observed differences in BP might be explained by different Na intakes, in this study the relationship between Na excretion and BP did not achieve statistical significance. Differences in the body mass index (BMI) accounted for 41 percent of the observed variance in BP


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Middle Aged , Humans , Health Surveys , Hypertension/etiology , Mexico , Risk Factors , Sodium Chloride/adverse effects
4.
Arch. latinoam. nutr ; 43(4): 277-285, Dec. 1993.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-318958

ABSTRACT

In clinical nutrition we are used to dealing with the clinical management of patients, but of equal or greater importance is the study of how nutrition affects the development of diseases or modifies its manifestations. This field is complex and links physiological studies of nutrition to the epidemiological analyses which form the basis of thinking in public health in Mexico today. Thus a number of studies have investigated the nutritional risk factors leading to the development of diseases such as heart disease and cancer (1-10). This epidemiological research requires the difficult task of accurately assessing the food consumption of individuals: with poor methodologies the chances of erroneous results are very high. This has implications for both group and individual comparison. Physiological studies on the effects of highly controlled changes in food intake on risk factors then allows the epidemiology to be interpreted in metabolic terms. In this paper we illustrate some of the benefits of metabolic studies and some of the requirements for this successful conduct.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Diet , Nutritional Sciences , Body Weight , Feces , Lithium , Sweat , Time Factors , Urine
5.
Cajanus ; 25(3): 138-144, 1992.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-387370

Subject(s)
Humans , Diet
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