Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Margaret J. Whichelow is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Margaret J. Whichelow.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2000

A cross-sectional study of dietary patterns with glucose intolerance and other features of the metabolic syndrome

Desmond E. Williams; A. T. Prevost; Margaret J. Whichelow; Brian D Cox; Nicholas E. Day; Nicholas J. Wareham

Previous epidemiological studies have demonstrated relationships between individual nutrients and glucose intolerance and type 2 diabetes, but the association with the overall pattern of dietary intake has not previously been described. In order to characterize this association, 802 subjects aged 40-65 years were randomly selected from a population-based sampling frame and underwent a 75 g oral glucose-tolerance test. Principal component analysis was used to identify four dietary patterns explaining 31.7% of the dietary variation in the study cohort. These dietary patterns were associated with other lifestyle factors including socio-economic group, smoking, alcohol intake and physical activity. Component 1 was characterized by a healthy balanced diet with a frequent intake of raw and salad vegetables, fruits in both summer and winter, fish, pasta and rice and low intake of fried foods, sausages, fried fish, and potatoes. This component was negatively correlated with central obesity, fasting plasma glucose, 120 min non-esterified fatty acid and triacylglycerol, and positively correlated with HDL-cholesterol. It therefore appears to be protective for the metabolic syndrome. Component 1 was negatively associated with the risk of having undiagnosed diabetes, and this association was independent of age, sex, smoking and obesity. The findings support the hypothesis that dietary patterns are associated with other lifestyle factors and with glucose intolerance and other features of the metabolic syndrome. The results provide further evidence for the recommendation of a healthy balanced diet as one of the main components of chronic disease prevention.


Thorax | 1991

Ventilatory function and winter fresh fruit consumption in a random sample of British adults.

D P Strachan; Brian D Cox; Sharon Erzinçlioğlu; D E Walters; Margaret J. Whichelow

The relation between ventilatory function and the reported frequency of consumption of fresh fruit and fruit juice was studied among 1502 lifelong non-smokers and 1357 current smokers aged 18-69 with no history of chronic respiratory disease. Forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) was assessed by turbine spirometry. As winter fruit consumption was more widely dispersed than summer consumption and few subjects ate fruit more frequently in the winter, winter fruit consumption was taken as an indicator of habitual (year round) consumption. After adjustment for sex, age, height, cigarette consumption, region of residence, and household socioeconomic group, FEV1 was associated with winter fruit consumption. The mean adjusted FEV1 among those who never drank fresh fruit juice and ate fresh fruit less than once a week during the winter was 78 ml lower (95% confidence interval 24-132 ml) than the mean for the other subjects. A similar difference was found in all age-sex groups and among both current smokers and lifelong non-smokers. Antioxidant and other actions of vitamin C may protect against pulmonary emphysema, or reduce bronchoconstrictor responses to environmental pollutants.


International Journal of Obesity | 1998

The development of cardiovascular disease in relation to anthropometric indices and hypertension in British adults.

Brian D Cox; Margaret J. Whichelow; At Prevost

OBJECTIVE: To examine the predictive ability of simple anthropometric indices for the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD) over seven years in British adults, and the influence of hypertension on these associations.DESIGN: Longitudinal study of the development of CVD (morbidity or mortality) over a seven year period in a random stratified sample of British adults who were respondents in the 1984–1985 Health and Lifestyle Survey (HALS1) and who were seen again in 1991–1992 (HALS2) or who had died by then.METHODS: Face-to-face interviews at HALS1 and HALS2 recorded socio-demographic, health and lifestyle details followed by measurements of height, weight, waist circumference and blood pressure (BP). The quintiles of body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, waist : height ratio (WHTR) and height were calculated for those aged between 35 and 75 y, at HALS1. Dates and causes of death were recorded. Logistic regression was used to estimate the odds ratios (OR) of developing CVD in 1284 men and 1570 women, aged 35–75 y who were free of known CVD, cancer and diabetes at HALS1.RESULTS: By HALS2, 316 respondents in the qualifying population had developed CVD, 114 of whom were dead. There were linear trends in the development of CVD (adjusted for age and smoking) for all the men from the lowest to the highest quintile of WHTR (P=0.034), but not for waist circumference (P=0.095), or BMI (P>0.2). Excluding the hypertensive men increased the significance of the trend for WHTR (P=0.005) and waist circumference (P=0.027). The significant interactions with hypertension for WHTR (P<0.001), waist circumference (P=0.006) and BMI (P=0.044) showed that there was an increasing incidence of CVD with increasing adiposity in non-hypertensive men but, in men with treated hypertension, although the overall incidence of CVD was higher, the relationship with adiposity was inverse.In the women, there were no significant linear trends for waist circumference, WHTR or BMI. Quintile estimates were more consistent with J-shaped curves with the lowest risk in the second quintile. Excluding the hypertensive women, increased the significance of these trends. In normotensive women, there was a significant quadratic trend (P=0.039) for the association between the incidence of CVD and the quintiles of waist circumference, but no associations for WHTR or BMI. For waist circumference there was weak evidence of an interaction with hypertension (P=0.053).CONCLUSIONS: For the men, indices involving waist circunference, particularly WHTR, had stronger linear associations with the log odds of CVD development than BMI. The interactions with hypertension were significant for WHTR, waist circunferenceand also BMI. In women, none of the indices was linearly associated with the log odds of CVD development, but there was a significant J-shaped curve for waist circumference and evidence of an interaction with hypertension. These results suggest that studies in which hypertensives are included, but in which possible hypertension interactions are overlooked, important hypertensive-specific associations between anthropometric indices and CVD development may be masked. Men on anti-hypertensive medication with the lowest central adiposity, experienced higher short-term CVD risk than those with greater central adiposity.


International Journal of Obesity | 1997

Association of anthropometric indices with elevated blood pressure in British adults

Brian D Cox; Margaret J. Whichelow; Margaret Ashwell; At Prevost; S. R. E. Lejeune

OBJECTIVE: To investigate which of six anthropometric indices was most strongly associated with elevated blood pressure and frank hypertension in a representative population sample of young and middle-aged British adults. SUBJECTS: A representative random sample of British adults (2712 men and 3279 women) aged between 18 and 64 y, who were resident in England, Scotland and Wales, were studied in the 1984–85 Health and Lifestyle Survey. MEASUREMENTS: Following an interview where demographic, health and lifestyle details were recorded, measurements of height, weight and waist and hip circumference were made by a nurse at a home visit, where blood pressure and medication to control blood pressure were also recorded. BMI and the ratios of waist circumference to height (WHTR) and waist circumference to hip (WHR) were calculated. Respondents with a blood pressure above 140 mm Hg (systolic) and/or 90 mm Hg (diastolic) or who were being treated for hypertension were classified as having elevated blood pressure. RESULTS: For men and women aged 18–39 and 40–64 y the prevalence of elevated blood pressure increased across the quintiles of BMI, weight, waist, WHTR and WHR was P<0.001 for each, with waist and WHTR having the highest odds ratios. Waist and height adjusted for each other were independently related to the prevalence of elevated blood pressure in 40–64 y old men and women. Height, on its own, was inversely related (P<0.05) only in the 40–64 y old men.  The age adjusted partial correlations between systolic and diastolic blood pressure measurements and the measurements of BMI, weight, waist, WHTR and WHR were close and significant, P<0.001 for each. The ranking and significance of the correlations were hardly affected by excluding the treated hypertensives. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of elevated blood pressure was associated with quintiles of BMI, waist, WHTR, WHR and weight, with WHTR and WHR having the highest odds ratios. Waist and height were independently related to the prevalence of elevated blood pressure.


BMJ | 1997

Frequent consumption of red meat is not risk factor for cancer.

Brian D Cox; Margaret J. Whichelow

Editor—Headlines such as “Big meat eaters cancer warning” ( Daily Mail , 13 September) have appeared in advance of the publication of the Department of Healths report on diet and cancer.1 2 A prospective study, however, analysed data from a nationwide random stratified sample of British adults to determine the relation between diet and cancer and found a protective role for fruit and salads but no evidence that frequent consumption of meat is a risk factor for cancer. Details of dietary habits (including the usual frequency of consumption …


Archive | 1993

The health and lifestyle survey : seven years on

Brian D Cox; Felicia A. Huppert; Margaret J. Whichelow


British Journal of Nutrition | 1996

Dietary patterns and their associations with demographic, lifestyle and health variables in a random sample of British adults

Margaret J. Whichelow; A Toby Prevost


Public Health Nutrition | 2000

Seasonal consumption of salad vegetables and fresh fruit in relation to the development of cardiovascular disease and cancer.

Brian D Cox; Margaret J. Whichelow; A Toby Prevost


BMJ | 1996

Ratio of waist circumference to height is better predictor of death than body mass index

Brian D Cox; Margaret J. Whichelow


Addiction | 1988

Comparison of Some Dietary Habits of Smokers and Non‐smokers

Margaret J. Whichelow; J. F. Golding; E. P. Treasure

Collaboration


Dive into the Margaret J. Whichelow's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian D Cox

University of Cambridge

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Margaret Ashwell

University of Hertfordshire

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. R. E. Lejeune

University of Hertfordshire

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sharon Erzinçlioğlu

Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge