Relationship Between Metabolic Syndrome Severity and Kidney Function as Related to Gender: A Population-Based Longitudinal Study.

CLINICAL NURSING RESEARCH(2020)

Cited 2|Views11
No score
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between the metabolic syndrome severityZ-score and kidney function by gender. We also examined the estimated glomerular filtration rate in relation to other known risk factors. The study used was a population-based prospective longitudinal research design. A total of 4,838 participants (2,683 females and 2,155 males) included individuals aged >30 years who were undergoing a health examination from 2006 to 2014 in Pingzhen City, Taiwan. In the initial generalized estimated equation model analysis, which included the covariates of age of first visit, period between the first and current visit, and metabolic syndrome severityZ-score, the results indicated that the interaction between age and metabolic syndrome severityZ-score is significantly related to the estimated glomerular filtration rate for males (p= .040). For females, the interaction between age and metabolic syndrome severityZ-score was not significant, but a higher metabolic syndrome severityZ-score was significantly associated with lower estimated glomerular filtration rate (p= .001). After controlling for the confounders, unhealthy behaviors, and comorbidities, the metabolic syndrome severityZ-score was still a negative predictor of estimated glomerular filtration rate in both the male (p= .005) and female (p= .023) models.
More
Translated text
Key words
metabolic syndrome,MetS severity Z-score,kidney function,eGFR,chronic disease,health behavior
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined