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      Effects of an intervention in eating habits and physical activity in Japanese-Brazilian women with a high prevalence of metabolic syndrome in Bauru, São Paulo State, Brazil.

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      Asian Continental Ancestry Group, Blood Glucose, analysis, Body Mass Index, Brazil, epidemiology, C-Reactive Protein, Cardiovascular Diseases, etiology, prevention & control, Cholesterol, blood, Diabetes Mellitus, Diet, Epidemiologic Methods, Feeding Behavior, physiology, Female, Health Promotion, Humans, Japan, ethnology, Life Style, Lipid Metabolism, Metabolic Syndrome X, complications, diagnosis, Middle Aged, Motor Activity, Waist Circumference

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          Abstract

          We evaluated the impact of a lifestyle intervention on the cardiometabolic risk profile of women participating in the Study on Diabetes and Associated Diseases in the Japanese-Brazilian Population in Bauru. This was a non-controlled experimental study including clinical and laboratory values at baseline and after a 1-year intervention period. 401 Japanese-Brazilian women were examined (age 60.8+/-11.7 years), and 365 classified for metabolic syndrome (prevalence = 50.6%). Subjects with metabolic syndrome were older than those without (63.0+/-10.0 vs. 56.7+/-11.6 years, p < 0.01). After intervention, improvements in variables were found, except for C-reactive protein. Body mass index and waist circumference decreased, but adiposity reduction was more pronounced in the abdominal region (87.0+/-9.7 to 84.5+/-11.2cm, p < 0.001). Intervention-induced differences in total cholesterol, LDL, and post-challenge glucose were significant; women who lost more than 5% body weight showed a better profile than those who did not. The lifestyle intervention in Japanese-Brazilian women at high cardiometabolic risk improved anthropometric and laboratory parameters, but it is not known whether such benefits will persist and result in long-term reduction in cardiovascular events.

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