Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic immune-mediated neurodegenerative disease that affects the central nervous system (CNS). The exact pathophysiology of MS remains unclear; it is suggested that the inflammatory state persists under a genetic-energetic-environmental complex causing a variety of clinical symptoms depending on the neuroanatomical location of MS lesions. The age of MS onset ranges between 20 and 40 years. MS is usually initiated as a relapsing-remitting disease, which may last several years to decades affecting females twice as often as males. Dietary factors may have an important impact on MS. Data from human and animal studies indicate that saturated fatty acids (SFA), the major fat type of animal foods in the "Western" diet, increase MS susceptibility. The Mediterranean dietary (MedDiet) pattern is hypothesized to be beneficial to MS patients protecting against the development cardiovascular diseases. However, little is known about the cardiovascular effects of the MedDiet on MS patients. Consequently, the aim of the present randomized, case control study was to investigate the effects of MedDiet on cardiovascular factors in women with relapsing-remitting MS after a 3-month intervention period.
* Adult women with MS, who were outpatients of Iaso Hospital (Athens, Greece), were enrolled in the present study. Detailed information was provided using a leaflet, in which aims and methodology were described before recruitment. All participants fulfilled informed consent and kept a signed copy. Before the start of the trial, the Ethics Committee of Iaso Hospital (Athens, Greece) assessed and approved the protocol of the study (Approval Code #E31052019). The study was performed according to principles of the Helsinki Declaration (1964) and terms of Good Clinical Practice. * The study took place during the winter season. All patients were recruited at the first week of December 2020 and the intervention lasted 3 months. * Study design: 3-month randomized, single center case control study; maintenance of the blind-to-treatment allocation was performed in order to avoid bias; in the intervention group, MS women received a personalized daily eating plan generated by a Clinical Decision Support System (CDSS) together with nutritional consultation on the Meditteranean dietary pattern, as well as physical activity guidelines; patients of the control group received general dietary advice and physical activity recommendation that was in accordance with the "National Dietary Guidelines for Greek adults"; * Screening: medical history; nutritional history (food frequency questionnaire, MedDietScore, 24-hr recalls); anthropometrics; depression and anxiety (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale); blood biomarkers (glucose, lipids, C-reactive protein).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
40
We investigated the potential cardiovascular health effects of the Mediterranean dietary pattern on adult women with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis, in regards to body weight, body composition, cardiovascular blood biomarkers (fasting glucose, lipids, C-reactive protein), as well as depression and anxiety levels.
Iaso Hospital
Athens, Greece
MedDietScore
The MedDietScore questionnaire estimated the degree of adherence to MD at the start of the study and at 3 months. Scoring ranges from "0" to "55" and higher scores signify greater MD adherence.
Time frame: 3 months
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