Korean J Nutr.  2003 Jul;36(6):622-634.

Study on Altered Food Preference and Food Frequency in Stroke Patients

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Hotel Culinary Arts and Nutrition, Kaya University, Koryung, Kyungnam, Korea.
  • 2Department of Neurology, College of Medical Science, Ulsan University, Ulsan, Korea.
  • 3College of Nursing, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the dietary habits and altered food preferences of stroke patients. One hundred and forty-six outpatients, who had experienced their first-ever stroke and were admitted to Asan Medical Center between July and December 2000, were studied. Using interviews, we assessed the altered food preferences, food consumption frequency, and other factors influencing the food preferences and food consumption frequency of the subjects. These results were analyzed with 2 t-tests, and multiple regression analysis, using the SPSS package program. Preferences for pork, red fish, coffee, bread and stews were higher in male stroke patients than in females. The frequency of consumption of beef, pork, white fish, red fish, egg, garlic, onion, coffee, instant noodles, bread, and culinary vegetables increased in the male stroke patients more than in the females. Food preferences were influenced by income, risk factors, subjective tastes and location of brain ischemic lesions. Food consumption frequency was affected by food preference, income, drugs, alcohol, marital status, sex, and dysgeusia. As a result of multiple regression analysis, the frequency of consumption of white fish, red fish, eggs, soy milk, milk, garlic, onions, coffee, noodles, bread, bean-paste stew, kimchi, culinary vegetables, and greasy foods were the most affected by each food preference. Our results suggest that food consumption frequency may vary with food preference, income, drugs, alcohol, marital status, sex, and dysgeusia, and nutrition education should be formulated to prevent stroke recurrence based on the food preferences, subjective tastes, and risk factors of individual stroke patients.

Keyword

altered food preference; dysgeusia; food consumption frequency; sex; stroke patients

MeSH Terms

Brain
Bread
Chungcheongnam-do
Coffee
Dysgeusia
Education
Eggs
Female
Food Habits
Food Preferences*
Garlic
Humans
Male
Marital Status
Milk
Onions
Outpatients
Ovum
Recurrence
Risk Factors
Soy Milk
Stroke*
Vegetables
Coffee
Full Text Links
  • KJN
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr