Clinics and Practice (May 2022)

BALANCE Dietary Index in Patients with Heart Failure, and Its Adherence in Sergipe, Brazil

  • Jamille Oliveira Costa,
  • Felipe J. Aidar,
  • Juliana Santos Barbosa,
  • Luciana Vieira Sousa Alves,
  • Victor Batista Oliveira,
  • Larissa Marina Santana Mendonça de Oliveira,
  • Raysa Manuelle Santos Rocha,
  • Diva Aliete dos Santos Vieira,
  • Ingrid Maria Novais Barros de Carvalho Costa,
  • Márcia Ferreira Cândido de Souza,
  • Joselina Luzia Menezes Oliveira,
  • Leonardo Baumworcel,
  • Eduardo Borba Neves,
  • Alfonso López Díaz-de-Durana,
  • Marcos Antonio Almeida-Santos,
  • Antônio Carlos Sobral Sousa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/clinpract12030043
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
pp. 383 – 395

Abstract

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Background: “The effective treatment of Heart Failure (HF) involves care with food intake. Recently, the Ministry of Health created the Brazilian Cardioprotective Diet and its dietary index, BALANCE, which assesses adherence to the standard’s recommendations”. Methods: This observational prospective study is part of the Congestive Heart Failure Registry (VICTIM-CHF) of Aracaju/SE. Observations and data collection took place from April 2018 to February 2021. Sociodemographic and clinical aspects and food consumption were evaluated. Food intake was determined using the food frequency questionnaire. Foods were categorized using the BALANCE dietary index into green, yellow, blue and red food groups. The BALANCE dietary index was obtained using median and interquartile ranges, scores of the Mann–Whitney U test, and associations between clinical variables and the index, through linear regression. Results: Participants included 240 patients with HF (61.12 ± 1.06 years), who were assisted by the Unified Health System (67.5%). Individuals with a partner showed greater adherence to the green food group recommendations (0.09; 0.00–0.17). The lowest adherence to recommendations regarding the blue food group was observed in individuals with excess weight, who had a higher consumption of foods rich in animal protein (0.54; 0.38–0.78). As for the red food group (ultra-processed foods) the highest adherence was observed by patients with diabetes mellitus (0.41; 0.05–0.77). The greatest adherence to the yellow food group, and a higher score, was observed in patients with the smallest left ventricular systolic diameter (LVSD). Conclusions: Being married was directly associated with the consumption of foods in the green group, while being overweight and having diabetes were inversely associated with adherence to the blue and red food groups, respectively. Greater adherence to the yellow food group recommendations was inversely associated with less change in the DSFVE.

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