Dyslipidemia and Glucose Profile: Metabolic and Nutritional Changes in Obese Women with Nomadic Routine in a Military Hospital / Dislipidemia e Perfil Glicídicos: Alterações Metabólicas e Nutricionais de Mulheres Obesas com Rotina Nômade em um Hospital Militar

Background: Obesity is a highly disabling comorbidity, being considered a risk factor for chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases. This metabolic alteration is closely related to lifestyle, food consumption, and physical inactivity. Amid a nomadic routine psychological disorders prevail...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brazilian Journal of Development 2021-08, Vol.7 (8), p.82989-83005
Hauptverfasser: Da Costa, Luciane Perez, Da Silva, Leticia Szulczewski Antunes, Hairrman, Raquel Santiago, Elias Jr, Erivaldo, Gouveia, Claudia Gonçalves, Silva Oliveira, Thais de Sousa Da, Sichinel, Ângela Hermínia, De Castro, Alinne Pereira
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container_end_page 83005
container_issue 8
container_start_page 82989
container_title Brazilian Journal of Development
container_volume 7
creator Da Costa, Luciane Perez
Da Silva, Leticia Szulczewski Antunes
Hairrman, Raquel Santiago
Elias Jr, Erivaldo
Gouveia, Claudia Gonçalves
Silva Oliveira, Thais de Sousa Da
Sichinel, Ângela Hermínia
De Castro, Alinne Pereira
description Background: Obesity is a highly disabling comorbidity, being considered a risk factor for chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases. This metabolic alteration is closely related to lifestyle, food consumption, and physical inactivity. Amid a nomadic routine psychological disorders prevail.Objective: To establish the relationship between dyslipidemia and changes in glucose metabolism in obese women in a nomadic routine.Methods: 86 women were assisted. Of these, 54 had completed a follow-up at the nutrition service outpatient clinic of a Military Hospital in the Area from September 2019 to June 2020. Retrospective data collected were as follows: socioeconomic and anthropometric data, food consumption, and biochemical profile (p0.05).Results: The age group was 31-49 years (68.52%). The seasonality caused by nomadism generated depression, anxiety, and binge eating, conditions worsened by cardiovascular risk factors, namely, systemic arterial hypertension (55.56%), heart failure (35.19%), and diabetes mellitus (44.44%). As for the nutritional diagnosis, 47.2% were grade 1 obese, with 91 kg average weight. Average values for high-density lipoprotein were low, at 45.98 mg/dl; fasting glucose was 107.04 mg/dl. It was observed that prediabetic patients with changes in glycated hemoglobin tended to have change in lipid metabolism. Diabetic diagnoses related to lower dyslipidemic change.Conclusion: The best way to treat and prevent dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus are lifestyle changes. Glucose intolerance directly affects care toward nutrition and the lifestyle. 
doi_str_mv 10.34117/bjdv7n8-484
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This metabolic alteration is closely related to lifestyle, food consumption, and physical inactivity. Amid a nomadic routine psychological disorders prevail.Objective: To establish the relationship between dyslipidemia and changes in glucose metabolism in obese women in a nomadic routine.Methods: 86 women were assisted. Of these, 54 had completed a follow-up at the nutrition service outpatient clinic of a Military Hospital in the Area from September 2019 to June 2020. Retrospective data collected were as follows: socioeconomic and anthropometric data, food consumption, and biochemical profile (p0.05).Results: The age group was 31-49 years (68.52%). The seasonality caused by nomadism generated depression, anxiety, and binge eating, conditions worsened by cardiovascular risk factors, namely, systemic arterial hypertension (55.56%), heart failure (35.19%), and diabetes mellitus (44.44%). As for the nutritional diagnosis, 47.2% were grade 1 obese, with 91 kg average weight. Average values for high-density lipoprotein were low, at 45.98 mg/dl; fasting glucose was 107.04 mg/dl. It was observed that prediabetic patients with changes in glycated hemoglobin tended to have change in lipid metabolism. Diabetic diagnoses related to lower dyslipidemic change.Conclusion: The best way to treat and prevent dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus are lifestyle changes. Glucose intolerance directly affects care toward nutrition and the lifestyle. </description><identifier>ISSN: 2525-8761</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 2525-8761</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.34117/bjdv7n8-484</identifier><language>eng</language><ispartof>Brazilian Journal of Development, 2021-08, Vol.7 (8), p.82989-83005</ispartof><woscitedreferencessubscribed>false</woscitedreferencessubscribed></display><links><openurl>$$Topenurl_article</openurl><openurlfulltext>$$Topenurlfull_article</openurlfulltext><thumbnail>$$Tsyndetics_thumb_exl</thumbnail><link.rule.ids>314,780,784,27924,27925</link.rule.ids></links><search><creatorcontrib>Da Costa, Luciane Perez</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Da Silva, Leticia Szulczewski Antunes</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Hairrman, Raquel Santiago</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Elias Jr, Erivaldo</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Gouveia, Claudia Gonçalves</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Silva Oliveira, Thais de Sousa Da</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Sichinel, Ângela Hermínia</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>De Castro, Alinne Pereira</creatorcontrib><title>Dyslipidemia and Glucose Profile: Metabolic and Nutritional Changes in Obese Women with Nomadic Routine in a Military Hospital / Dislipidemia e Perfil Glicídicos: Alterações Metabólicas e Nutricionais de Mulheres Obesas com Rotina Nômade em um Hospital Militar</title><title>Brazilian Journal of Development</title><description>Background: Obesity is a highly disabling comorbidity, being considered a risk factor for chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases. This metabolic alteration is closely related to lifestyle, food consumption, and physical inactivity. Amid a nomadic routine psychological disorders prevail.Objective: To establish the relationship between dyslipidemia and changes in glucose metabolism in obese women in a nomadic routine.Methods: 86 women were assisted. Of these, 54 had completed a follow-up at the nutrition service outpatient clinic of a Military Hospital in the Area from September 2019 to June 2020. Retrospective data collected were as follows: socioeconomic and anthropometric data, food consumption, and biochemical profile (p0.05).Results: The age group was 31-49 years (68.52%). The seasonality caused by nomadism generated depression, anxiety, and binge eating, conditions worsened by cardiovascular risk factors, namely, systemic arterial hypertension (55.56%), heart failure (35.19%), and diabetes mellitus (44.44%). As for the nutritional diagnosis, 47.2% were grade 1 obese, with 91 kg average weight. Average values for high-density lipoprotein were low, at 45.98 mg/dl; fasting glucose was 107.04 mg/dl. It was observed that prediabetic patients with changes in glycated hemoglobin tended to have change in lipid metabolism. Diabetic diagnoses related to lower dyslipidemic change.Conclusion: The best way to treat and prevent dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus are lifestyle changes. 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This metabolic alteration is closely related to lifestyle, food consumption, and physical inactivity. Amid a nomadic routine psychological disorders prevail.Objective: To establish the relationship between dyslipidemia and changes in glucose metabolism in obese women in a nomadic routine.Methods: 86 women were assisted. Of these, 54 had completed a follow-up at the nutrition service outpatient clinic of a Military Hospital in the Area from September 2019 to June 2020. Retrospective data collected were as follows: socioeconomic and anthropometric data, food consumption, and biochemical profile (p0.05).Results: The age group was 31-49 years (68.52%). The seasonality caused by nomadism generated depression, anxiety, and binge eating, conditions worsened by cardiovascular risk factors, namely, systemic arterial hypertension (55.56%), heart failure (35.19%), and diabetes mellitus (44.44%). As for the nutritional diagnosis, 47.2% were grade 1 obese, with 91 kg average weight. Average values for high-density lipoprotein were low, at 45.98 mg/dl; fasting glucose was 107.04 mg/dl. It was observed that prediabetic patients with changes in glycated hemoglobin tended to have change in lipid metabolism. Diabetic diagnoses related to lower dyslipidemic change.Conclusion: The best way to treat and prevent dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus are lifestyle changes. Glucose intolerance directly affects care toward nutrition and the lifestyle. </abstract><doi>10.34117/bjdv7n8-484</doi></addata></record>
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title Dyslipidemia and Glucose Profile: Metabolic and Nutritional Changes in Obese Women with Nomadic Routine in a Military Hospital / Dislipidemia e Perfil Glicídicos: Alterações Metabólicas e Nutricionais de Mulheres Obesas com Rotina Nômade em um Hospital Militar
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