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Diabetes Care, Vol 18, Issue 4 448-456, Copyright © 1995 by American Diabetes Association
Sex difference in lifestyle factors predictive of diabetes in Mexican-Americans
AE Monterrosa, SM Haffner, MP Stern and HP Hazuda
Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio 78284-7873, USA.
OBJECTIVE--Little is known about the role of lifestyle factors in
non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) incidence among
Mexican-Americans. Therefore, we examined whether baseline lifestyle
factors predictive of 8-year NIDDM incidence differ in Mexican-American men
and women. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS--We studied 353 Mexican-American men
and 491 Mexican-American women free of diabetes at baseline who
participated in the San Antonio Heart Study follow-up. Lifestyle factors
examined were body mass index (BMI), energy intake (total calories/kg),
grams of alcohol consumed per week, efforts to control weight by dieting
and exercise, leisure physical activity, sugar avoidance, saturated
fat/cholesterol avoidance, and 24-h dietary recall assessment of total
calories and percentage of calories from total carbohydrate, sucrose, and
starch and from total, saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated fat.
Incidence of NIDDM was regressed on lifestyle factors separately for men
and women using a backward elimination procedure. RESULTS--Lifestyle
factors significantly associated with NIDDM incidence differed for the two
sexes. In men, leisure physical activity, was inversely associated and
alcohol consumption, weight control by dieting, and BMI were positively
associated with NIDDM. In women, BMI was positively associated with NIDDM
and was the strongest lifestyle predictor.Sugar avoidance and leisure
physical activity were also associated with increased NIDDM risk, while
weight control by dieting was associated with decreased NIDDM risk.
Saturated fat/cholesterol avoidance, grams of alcohol consumed per week,
and energy intake were also negatively and indirectly associated with NIDDM
in women by means of their direct effects on BMI. CONCLUSIONS--It may be
important to tailor interventions designed to prevent NIDDM in
Mexican-Americans to address sex differences in lifestyle precursors of
this disease

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Copyright © 1995 by the American Diabetes Association.
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