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Featured researches published by Alicia Moag-Stahlberg.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2003

Nutrient intakes of middle-aged men and women in China, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States in the late 1990s: the INTERMAP study

Beifan Zhou; Jeremiah Stamler; Barbara H. Dennis; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Nagako Okuda; Claire E. Robertson; Liancheng Zhao; Queenie Chan; Paul Elliott

The purpose of the study was to compare nutrient intakes among Chinese, Japanese, UK, and US INTERMAP samples, and assess possible relationships of dietary patterns to differential patterns of cardiovascular diseases between East Asian and Western countries. Based on a common Protocol and Manuals of Operations, high-quality dietary data were collected by four standardized 24-h dietary recalls and two 24-h urine collections from 17 population samples in China (three samples), Japan (four samples), UK (two samples), and USA (eight samples). There were about 260 men and women aged 40–59 years per sample—total N=4680. Quality of dietary interview and data entry were monitored and enhanced by extensive systematic ongoing quality control procedures at local, country, and international level. Four databases on nutrient composition of foods from the four countries were updated and enhanced (76 nutrients for all four countries) by the Nutrition Coordinating Center, University of Minnesota, in cooperation with Country Nutritionists. The mean body mass index was much higher for Western than East Asian samples. Macronutrient intakes differed markedly across these samples, with Western diet higher in total fat, saturated and trans fatty acids, and Keys dietary lipid score, lower in total carbohydrate and starch, higher in sugars. Based on extensive published data, it is a reasonable inference that this pattern relates to higher average levels of serum total cholesterol and higher mortality from coronary heart disease in Western than East Asian populations. The rural Chinese diet was lower in protein, especially animal protein, in calcium, phosphorus, selenium, and vitamin A. Dietary sodium was higher, potassium lower, hence Na/K ratio was higher in the Asian diet, especially for Chinese samples. This pattern is known to relate to risks of adverse blood pressure level and stroke. At the end of the 20th century, East Asian and Western diets remain significantly different in macro- and micronutrient composition. Both dietary patterns have aspects that can be regarded, respectively, as adverse and protective in relation to the major adult cardiovascular diseases. In both Asian and Western countries, public efforts should be targeted at overcoming adverse aspects and maintaining protective patterns for prevention and control of cardiovascular diseases.


Hypertension | 2007

Food Omega-3 Fatty Acid Intake of Individuals (Total, Linolenic Acid, Long-Chain) and Their Blood Pressure. INTERMAP Study

Hirotsugu Ueshima; Jeremiah Stamler; Paul Elliott; Queenie Chan; Ian J. Brown; Mercedes R. Carnethon; Martha L. Daviglus; Ka He; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Beatriz L. Rodriguez; Lyn M. Steffen; Linda Van Horn; John Yarnell; Beifan Zhou

Findings from short-term randomized trials indicate that dietary supplements of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PFA) lower blood pressure of hypertensive persons, but effect size in nonhypertensive individuals is small and nonsignificant. Data are lacking on food omega-3 PFA and blood pressure in general populations. The International Study of Macro- and Micro-nutrients and Blood Pressure (INTERMAP) is an international cross-sectional epidemiologic study of 4680 men and women ages 40 to 59 from 17 population-based samples in China, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States. We report associations of food omega-3 PFA intake (total, linolenic acid, long-chain) of individuals with blood pressure. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure were measured 8 times at 4 visits. With several models to control for possible confounders (dietary, other), linear regression analyses showed inverse relationship of total omega-3 PFA from food (percent kilocalories, from four 24-hour dietary recalls) to systolic and diastolic blood pressures. With adjustment for 17 variables, estimated systolic blood pressure/diastolic blood pressure differences with 2 standard deviation higher (0.67% kcal) omega-3 PFA were −0.55/−0.57 mm Hg (Z-score −1.33, −2.00); for 2238 persons without medical or dietary intervention, −1.01/−0.98 mm Hg (Z −1.63, −2.25); for 2038 nonhypertensive persons from this sub-cohort, −0.91/−0.92 mm Hg (Z −1.80, −2.38). For linolenic acid (largely from vegetable foods), blood pressure differences were similar, eg, for the 2238 “nonintervened” individuals, −0.97/−0.87 mm Hg (Z −1.52, −1.95); blood pressure differences were −0.32/−0.45 mm Hg for long-chain omega-3 PFA (largely from fish). In summary, food omega-3 PFA intake related inversely to blood pressure, including in nonhypertensive persons, with small estimated effect size. Food omega-3 PFA may contribute to prevention and control of adverse blood pressure levels.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2003

INTERMAP: the dietary data--process and quality control.

Barbara H. Dennis; Jeremiah Stamler; M Buzzard; R Conway; Paul Elliott; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; A Okayama; Nagako Okuda; Claire E. Robertson; F Robinson; Sally F. Schakel; Mary Stevens; N. Van Heel; Liancheng Zhao; Beifan Zhou

The aim of this report is to describe INTERMAP standardized procedures for assessing dietary intake of 4680 individuals from 17 population samples in China, Japan, UK and USA: Based on a common Protocol and Manuals of Operations, standardized collection by centrally trained certified staff of four 24 h dietary recalls, two timed 24-h urines, two 7-day histories of daily alcohol intake per participant; tape recording of all dietary interviews, and use of multiple methods for ongoing quality control of dietary data collection and processing (local, national, and international); one central laboratory for urine analyses; review, update, expansion of available databases for four countries to produce comparable data on 76 nutrients for all reported foods; use of these databases at international coordinating centres to compute nutrient composition. Chinese participants reported 2257 foods; Japanese, 2931; and UK, 3963. In US, use was made of 17 000 food items in the online automated Nutrition Data System. Average time/recall ranged from 22 min for China to 31 min for UK. Among indicators of dietary data quality, coding error rates (from recoding 10% random samples of recalls) were 2.3% for China, 1.4% for Japan, and UK; an analogous US procedure (re-entry of recalls into computer from tape recordings) also yielded low discrepancy rates. Average scores on assessment of taped dietary interviews were high, 40.4 (Japan) to 45.3 (China) (highest possible score: 48); correlations between urinary and dietary nutrient values—similar for men and women—were, for all 4680 participants, 0.51 for total protein, range across countries 0.40–0.52; 0.55 for potassium, range 0.30–0.58; 0.42 for sodium, range 0.33–0.46. The updated dietary databases are valuable international resources. Dietary quality control procedures yielded data generally indicative of high quality performance in the four countries. These procedures were time consuming. Ongoing recoding of random samples of recalls is deemed essential. Use of tape recorded dietary interviews contributed to quality control, despite feasibility problems, deemed remediable by protocol modification. For quality assessment, use of correlation data on dietary and urinary nutrient values yielded meaningful findings, including evidence of special difficulties in assessing sodium intake by dietary methods.


Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 1993

The dietary intervention study in children (DISC) : dietary assessment methods for 8- to 10-year-olds

Linda Van Horn; Phyllis J. Stumbo; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Eva Obarzanek; Virginia W. Hartmuller; Rosanne P. Farris; Sue Y. S. Kimm; Margaret M. Frederick; Linda Snetselaar; Kiang Liu

OBJECTIVES The dietary assessment methods used in the Dietary Intervention Study in Children (DISC) are described and the rationale, validity, and/or general usefulness of each are discussed. DESIGN DISC is the first multicenter, randomized, clinical trial to study the feasibility and long-term efficacy, safety, and acceptability of a fat-moderately diet in 8- to 10-year-old prepubescent children with moderately elevated plasma low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels. Final data collection for the original study (DISC I) occurred December 1, 1993; continued intervention and follow-up (DISC II) will extend beyond 1997. SETTING Six clinical centers across the country participate in DISC. SUBJECTS Preadolescent boys and girls with fasting LDL-C levels between the 80th and 98th age-specific and sex-specific percentiles established by the Lipid Research Clinics were eligible for the study. The feasibility phase included 140 children who were then enveloped into the full-scale trial. Baseline dietary data for 652 randomized children in the full-scale trial and 6-month results for the feasibility cohort are reported. INTERVENTIONS Dietary assessment involved several elements: (a) determining eligibility based on consumption of more than 30% of energy from total fat, (b) monitoring adherence to and adequacy of the intervention diet, (c) evaluating acceptability of the diet in the intervention group, and (d) determining appropriate foods for the intervention diet. Methods are described for each purpose. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES LDL-C differences between the two groups and differences in total and saturated fat intakes as calculated from three 24-hour recalls were the primary outcome measures. Six-month dietary differences in the feasibility group are reported. STATISTICAL METHODS Baseline group means and 6-month differences in dietary intake are reported for the full-scale trial and feasibility study, respectively. RESULTS Baseline mean intake from three dietary recalls for the intervention (n = 328) and control (n = 324) groups, respectively, were as follows: energy = 1,759 kcal and 1,728 kcal; total energy from fat = 33.3% and 34.0%; total energy from saturated fat = 12.5% and 12.7%; and total dietary cholesterol = 209 mg and 195 mg. After 6 months of intervention, percentage of energy from total fat and saturated fat was reduced by 5.1% (P = .004) and 2.9% (P < .001), respectively, in this feasibility subset (n = 73) of the intervention group. Essentially no change in these parameters occurred in the control group (n = 67), which demonstrates a measurable difference in reporting between groups. APPLICATIONS/CONCLUSIONS Results illustrate the feasibility of implementing a variety of dietary assessment methods among preadolescent children without relying primarily on parental reports.


American Journal of Public Health | 1991

Effects on serum lipids of adding instant oats to usual American diets.

L. Van Horn; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Kiang Liu; Carol Ballew; Karen J. Ruth; R. Hughes; Jeremiah Stamler

This study was designed as a test of the serum lipid response and dietary adaptation to recommended daily inclusion of instant oats in an otherwise regular diet. Hypercholesterolemic adults were randomly assigned to a control or intervention group. Participants in the intervention group were given packages of instant oats and requested to eat two servings per day (approximately two ounces dry weight), substituting the oats for other carbohydrate foods in order to maintain baseline calorie intake and keep weight stable. Serum lipids were measured in blood collected by venipuncture at baseline, four weeks, and eight weeks. Baseline mean total cholesterol (TC) levels were 6.56 mmol/L and 6.39 mmol/L for intervention and control groups, respectively. After eight weeks, mean serum total cholesterol of the intervention group was lower by -0.40 mmol/L, and mean net difference in TC between the two groups was 0.32 mmol/L (95% CI: 0.09, 0.54). Low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol was similarly reduced with mean net difference of 0.25 mmol/L (95% CI: 0.02, 0.48) between the two groups. Mean soluble fiber intake increased along with slight self-imposed reductions in mean total fat, saturated fat, and dietary cholesterol intake in the intervention group. Neither group changed mean body weight. Daily inclusion of two ounces of oats appeared to facilitate reduction of serum total cholesterol and LDL-C in these hyperlipidemic individuals.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2003

Higher blood pressure in middle-aged American adults with less education-role of multiple dietary factors: the INTERMAP study.

Jeremiah Stamler; Paul Elliott; L. J. Appel; Queenie Chan; M Buzzard; Barbara H. Dennis; Alan R. Dyer; Patricia J. Elmer; Phillip Greenland; D Jones; H Kesteloot; Lew Kuller; Darwin R. Labarthe; Kiang Liu; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Milton Z. Nichaman; Akira Okayama; Nagako Okuda; Claire E. Robertson; Beatriz L. Rodriguez; M Stevens; Hirotsugu Ueshima; L. Van Horn; Beifan Zhou

Extensive evidence exists that an inverse relation between education and blood pressure prevails in many adult populations, but little research has been carried out on reasons for this finding. A prior goal of the INTERMAP Study was to investigate this phenomenon further, and to assess the role of dietary factors in accounting for it. Of the 4680 men and women aged 40–59 years, from 17 diverse population samples in Japan, Peoples Republic of China, UK, and USA, a strong significant inverse education–BP relation was manifest particularly for the 2195 USA participants, independent of ethnicity. With participants stratified by years of education, and assessment of 100+ dietary variables from four 24-h dietary recalls and two 24-h urine collections/person, graded relationships were found between education and intake of many macro- and micronutrients, electrolytes, fibre, and body mass index (BMI). In multiple linear regression analyses with systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) of individuals the dependent variables (controlled for ethnicity, other possible nondietary confounders), BMI markedly reduced size of education–BP relations, more so for women than for men. Several nutrients considered singly further decreased size of this association by ⩾10%: urinary 24-h Na and K excretion, Keys dietary lipid score, vegetable protein, fibre, vitamins C and B6, thiamin, riboflavin, folate, calcium, magnesium, and iron. Combinations of these dietary variables and BMI attenuated the education–SBP inverse coefficient by 54–58%, and the education–DBP inverse coefficient by 59–67%, with over half these effects attributable to specific nutrients (independent of BMI). As a result, the inverse education–BP coefficients ceased to be statistically significant. Multiple specific dietary factors together with body mass largely account for the more adverse BP levels of less educated than more educated Americans. Special efforts to improve eating patterns of less educated strata can contribute importantly to overcoming this and related health disparities in the population.


Journal of Food Composition and Analysis | 2003

Enhancing data on nutrient composition of foods eaten by participants in the INTERMAP study in China, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States

Sally F. Schakel; Barbara H. Dennis; A.Christine Wold; Rana E. Conway; Liancheng Zhao; Nagako Okuda; Akira Okayama; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Claire E. Robertson; Nancy Van Heel; I.Marilyn Buzzard; Jeremiah Stamler

The International Study of Macronutrients and Blood Pressure (INTERMAP) is a four-country study investigating relationships between individual dietary intakes and blood pressure. Dietary intake patterns of individuals were estimated for macronutrients (proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, alcohol) and their components (amino acids, fatty acids, starch), as well as minerals, vitamins, caffeine, and dietary fiber. The dietary assessment phase of the study involved collection of four 24-h recalls and two 24-h urine specimens from each of 4680 adults, ages 40-59, at 16 centers located in the Peoples Republic of China, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States. For each country, an available database of nutrient composition of locally consumed foods was updated for use in the analysis of dietary data collected within the country. The four original databases differed in number and types of foods and nutrients included, analytic methods used to derive nutrients, and percentage of missing nutrient values. The Nutrition Coordinating Center at the University of Minnesota updated the original databases in several ways to overcome the foregoing limitations and increase comparability in the analyses of nutrient intake of individuals across the four countries: (1) addition of new foods and preparation methods reported by study participants; (2) addition of missing nutrient fields important to the study objectives; (3) imputation of missing nutrient values to provide complete nutrient data for each food reported by participants; and (4) use of adjustment factors to enhance comparability among estimates of nutrient intake obtained through each countrys nutrient-coding methodology. It was possible to expand, enhance, and adjust the nutrient databases from the four countries to produce comparable (60 nutrients) or nearly comparable (ten nutrients) data on composition of all foods reported by INTERMAP participants.


Topics in clinical nutrition | 2004

Action for Healthy Kids: Focus on State Teams: Current Initiatives for Sound Nutrition and Physical Activity Programs in Schools

Alicia Moag-Stahlberg

Nutrition professionals face a growing challenge: severe overweight and obesity among children and adolescents. The problems of overweight, sedentary lifestyles, and undernourishment in youth are entrenched in American culture. These problems make it vital for nutrition professionals to work in partnership with a multidisciplined team to find solutions and reverse this trend. They can join representatives from education, physical activity, and health who are working for change through Action for Healthy Kids (AFHK), which has mobilized 51 state teams to initiate and sustain action at the state, school district, and building levels. Nutrition professionals can offer their advice and expertise to AFHK state teams, ultimately helping schools create sound nutrition education programs and practices.


Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 1996

Breeding and Feeding Pracitces Yields Leaner Duckling Products

Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; Jean Ragalie

Abstract LEARNING OUTCOME: To use new analytical nutrient data for White Peking duckling for all food composition applications. Nutrient data for duck available from the USDA National Nutrient Data Bank, as well as other nutrient data bases, is outdated and limited. The currently available nutrient data does not reflect most common cuts of duck, most frequently used cooking methods, or the true nutrient composition. Duckling products available to the consumer through food service outlets and retail sales have a very different fat profile than that depicted by the nutrient data bases. Over the last ten to fifteen years, ducklings have had fat bred off through changes in feeding, breeding, and genetic selection. To provide a composite nutritional value of nationally available duckling, samples of duckling were collected from the five major White Peking duckling producers and nutrient analysis was completed at Corning Hazleton Laboratories, Madison, Wisconsin. Each producer provided 12 samples of fresh duckling for batch analysis including: breast meat with and without skin, and leg meat with and without skin. Central standardized methods of cutting, cooking, and documenting were strictly adhered to. Analysis was completed for 40 nutrients, ash, moisture, and included a complete fatty acid profile with total trails fatty acids. A remarkable difference in total fat and saturated fat was observed. The new 100 gram data for skinless breast meat is 2.1 grams for total fat and 0.5 grams for saturated fat compared with 11.2 grams total fat and 4.2 grams for saturated fat cited in the USDA data bank information. Calories for the skinless duck breast is 132 compared with 201 form the USDA data, and iron is 4.5mg, for the new composite value compared with 2.7mg.The full nutrient profile for all cuts of cooked duckling analyzed will be shared at the presentation.


Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 1990

Dietary assessment in children using electronic methods: Telephones and tape recorders

L. Van Horn; Niki Gernhofer; Alicia Moag-Stahlberg; R. Farris; G. Hartmuller; V.I. Lasser; P. Stumbo; S. Craddick; Carol Ballew

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Jeremiah Stamler

Rush University Medical Center

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Barbara H. Dennis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Paul Elliott

Imperial College London

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Alan R. Dyer

Northwestern University

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Carol Ballew

Northwestern University

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Daniel B. Garside

University of Illinois at Chicago

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