Dietary n-3 Fatty Acid, α-Tocopherol, Zinc, Vitamin D, Vitamin C, and β-carotene are Associated with Age-Related Macular Degeneration in Japan

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Abstract

This case-control study reports the association between nutrient intake and neovascular age-related macular degeneration (AMD) in Japan. The nutrient intake of 161 neovascular AMD cases from two university hospitals and 369 population-based control subjects from a cohort study was assessed using a brief-Type self-Administered questionnaire on diet history, which required respondent recall of the usual intake of 58 foods during the preceding month. Energy-Adjusted nutrient intake values were compared between the groups. Logistic regression analysis was used to estimate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CIs adjusted for smoking history, age, sex, chronic disease history, supplement use, and alcohol consumption. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that low intakes of n-3 fatty acid, α-Tocopherol, zinc, vitamin D, vitamin C, and β-carotene were associated with neovascular AMD (Trend P < 0.0001 for n-3 fatty acid, Trend P < 0.0001 for α-Tocopherol, Trend P < 0.0001 for zinc, Trend P = 0.002 for vitamin D, Trend P = 0.04 for vitamin C, Trend P = 0.0004 for β-carotene). There was no association with retinol or cryptoxanthin intake and neovascular AMD (P = 0.67, 0.06).

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Aoki, A., Inoue, M., Nguyen, E., Obata, R., Kadonosono, K., Shinkai, S., … Yanagi, Y. (2016). Dietary n-3 Fatty Acid, α-Tocopherol, Zinc, Vitamin D, Vitamin C, and β-carotene are Associated with Age-Related Macular Degeneration in Japan. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20723

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