作者
Gal Tsaban,Anat Yaskolka Meir,Ehud Rinott,Hila Zelicha,Alon Kaplan,Aryeh Shalev,Amos Katz,Assaf Rudich,Amir Tirosh,Ilan Shelef,Ilan Youngster,Sharon Lebovitz,Noa Israeli,May Shabat,Dov Brikner,Efrat Pupkin,Michael Stumvoll,Joachim Thiery,Uta Ceglarek,John T. Heiker,Antje Körner,Kathrin Landgraf,Martin von Bergen,Matthias Blüher,Meir J. Stampfer,Iris Shai
摘要
Background A Mediterranean diet is favourable for cardiometabolic risk. Objective To examine the residual effect of a green Mediterranean diet, further enriched with green plant-based foods and lower meat intake, on cardiometabolic risk. Methods For the DIRECT-PLUS parallel, randomised clinical trial we assigned individuals with abdominal obesity/dyslipidaemia 1:1:1 into three diet groups: healthy dietary guidance (HDG), Mediterranean and green Mediterranean diet, all combined with physical activity. The Mediterranean diets were equally energy restricted and included 28 g/day walnuts. The green Mediterranean diet further included green tea (3–4 cups/day) and a Wolffia globosa (Mankai strain; 100 g/day frozen cubes) plant-based protein shake, which partially substituted animal protein. We examined the effect of the 6-month dietary induction weight loss phase on cardiometabolic state. Results Participants (n=294; age 51 years; body mass index 31.3 kg/m2; waist circumference 109.7 cm; 88% men; 10 year Framingham risk score 4.7%) had a 6-month retention rate of 98.3%. Both Mediterranean diets achieved similar weight loss ((green Mediterranean −6.2 kg; Mediterranean −5.4 kg) vs the HDG group −1.5 kg; p Conclusions The green MED diet, supplemented with walnuts, green tea and Mankai and lower in meat/poultry, may amplify the beneficial cardiometabolic effects of Mediterranean diet. Trial registration number This study is registered under ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier no NCT03020186.