Author:
Akbarzadeh Mahdi,Teymoori Farshad,Riahi Parisa,Farhadnejad Hossein,Ahmadirad Hamid,Sadat Zahedi Asiyeh,Hosseini-Esfahani Firoozeh,Zarkesh Maryam,Vafa Mohammadreza,Mirmiran Parvin,Daneshpour Maryam S.
Abstract
AbstractWe sought to investigate the familial aggregation and family-based heritability of dietary intakes among adults in a population-based longitudinal study of the Tehran Lipid and Glucose Study (TLSG). Total of 4359 males and 5439 females entered our study. We categorized foods into main groups based on the literature on main food groups and their subgroups among the Iranian dietary habits and food culture as follows: grains, fruits, vegetables, dairy, meats, legume, nuts, beverages, snacks, and fats. The intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) are estimated to verify familial resemblance of dietary habits for all relative pairs and spouses. Family-based heritability is obtained using a mixed effect framework with likelihood-based approach. For almost all food groups, the correlation between parents and offsprings tended to be larger than those of siblings. Family-based heritability of food groups varies from the lowest 6.36% for snacks to the highest 25.67% for fruits, and 25.66% for legume. Our findings indicated weak-to-moderate similarities between parents' and offspring's food intakes; however, the similarity in parent–child food intakes was different, and the correlation in mother-daughter food intakes was stronger than other parent–child correlations, and almost all of dietary components showed strong family-based heritability.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
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