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"Yoon Jeong Cho"

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"Yoon Jeong Cho"

Original Articles
The Relationship between Dietary Na/K Ratio and Bone Mineral Density in Korean Middle-Aged Women
Seong Su Choi, Yun-A Kim, Hyun Ji Kim, Yoon Jeong Cho, Geon Ho Lee
Korean J Fam Med 2023;44(1):21-27.   Published online January 19, 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.21.0208
Background
Dietary Na+ or Na+/K+ ratio has been reported to be associated with bone mineral density (BMD). However, this remains unclear, and only a few studies have been reported on the Korean population. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the association between dietary Na+, K+, and Na+/K+ ratios and BMD in middle-aged Korean women.
Methods
This study used data from the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2008–2011. A total of 3,690 women aged >50 years were included. Study participants were classified into quartiles (lowest quartile Q1–highest quartile Q4) according to dietary Na+, K+, and Na+/K+ ratio, and we examined the association of these parameters with BMD. Total femur and lumbar spine BMD were measured using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry. Multiple linear regression analyses were performed using IBM SPSS ver. 19.0.
Results
The mean age was 62 years, and a significant negative trend in the β-coefficient regarding dietary Na+ was only observed in the total femur BMD. However, the total femur and lumbar spine BMD decreased from Q1 to Q4 regarding the dietary Na+/K+ ratio (P-value for trend: 0.044 for total femur BMD and 0.002 for lumbar spine BMD).
Conclusion
A significant negative trend in the β-coefficient for both total femur and lumbar spine BMD was observed regarding the Na+/K+ ratio. Therefore, based on the results of this study, a higher dietary Na+/K+ ratio may be associated with a lower BMD.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Bioactive Compounds and Health Functions of Plums: Current Status and Future Opportunities
    Ming-Qiang Xu, Samuel Ariyo Okaiyeto, Xiao-Xiao Niu, Qing-Hui Wang, Sriram K. Vidyarthi, Haiou Wang, Li-Zhen Deng, Parag Prakash Sutar, Hong-Wei Xiao
    Food Reviews International.2025; 41(5): 1360.     CrossRef
  • Does Changing the Ratio of Dietary Sodium-to-Potassium Intake Affect Bone Mineral Density?
    Soo Young Kim
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2023; 44(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • 3,695 View
  • 105 Download
  • 2 Web of Science
  • 2 Crossref
Age-Related Difference in Weight Change and All-Cause Mortality in Middle-Aged and Older Korean Populations: Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging
Jungki Suh, Yoon Jeong Cho, Hyun Ji Kim, Seong Soo Choi
Korean J Fam Med 2021;42(4):297-302.   Published online July 20, 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.20.0170
Background
Obesity is associated with increased mortality as a significant risk factor for chronic diseases, including cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Several people believe that weight gain is harmful, and weight loss helps maintain health. However, some studies have shown that weight loss, particularly among older adults, is more likely to increase the risk of mortality than weight gain.
Methods
We used data for the cohort of the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging, which is a nationwide stratified multi-stage sample of adults aged 45 years. The all-cause mortality risk was assessed using the survival status and the number of months of survival calculated from 2006 (baseline year) to 2016. Cox proportional hazard regression were used to study the causal link between weight change and all-cause mortality risk.
Results
The results showed interactive associations between weight loss and mortality among middle-aged and older adults. The hazard ratio was 1.62 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.10–2.40) for the participants aged 45–65 years with weight losses greater than 5 kg and 1.56 (95% CI, 1.29–1.89) for those older than 65 years with weight losses greater than 5 kg. The results for the group with weight gain above 5 kg were not significant. Middle-aged and older men showed an increase in all-cause mortality associated with weight loss of more than 5 kg, but only the older women showed significant results.
Conclusion
This large-scale cohort study in Korea showed a relationship between weight loss and all-cause mortality in middle-aged and older individuals.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Body mass index trajectories and all-cause mortality in older Chinese adults: Hong Kong’s Elderly Health Service Cohort
    Man Ki Kwok, Siu Yin Lee, Gabriel M Leung, C Mary Schooling
    Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.2025; : jech-2025-223659.     CrossRef
  • Associations of obesity indices change with cardiovascular outcomes: a dose-response meta-analysis
    Lyu Wang, Hanyue Ding, Yunyang Deng, Junjie Huang, Xiangqian Lao, Martin C. S. Wong
    International Journal of Obesity.2024; 48(5): 635.     CrossRef
  • Social isolation and depression as risk factors for weight loss of 5kg or more among older Korean adults
    Youngjoon Bae, Mark C. Pachucki, Ellen L. Idler
    PLOS ONE.2024; 19(3): e0299096.     CrossRef
  • Associations of short‐term changes in obesity indices with all‐cause mortality and cardiovascular disease
    Lyu Wang, Yun‐Yang Deng, Tsung Yu, Xiang‐Qian Lao, Martin C. S. Wong
    Obesity.2024; 32(8): 1568.     CrossRef
  • In-hospital outcomes of older patients with gastric cancer and their risk factors: large comprehensive institution-based study
    Lei Huang, Yunmei Liu, Lei Wang, Lan Rong, Weiguo Hu
    European Geriatric Medicine.2024; 15(6): 1909.     CrossRef
  • Weight loss rather than weight gain has a detrimental effect on successful aging in older adults: A 4-year longitudinal study in China
    Nan Liu, Tao Liu, Yihan Pan, Jin Wang, Xiaoguang Zhao
    Geriatric Nursing.2024; 60: 297.     CrossRef
  • Association of weight change with all-cause and cause-specific mortality: an age-stratified analysis
    Qing-Mei Huang, Dong Shen, Jian Gao, Huan Chen, Jia-Hao Xie, Hao-Yu Yan, Bin Wu, Zhi-Hao Li, Gang Liu, Chen Mao
    BMC Medicine.2024;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Associations of Change in Body Size With All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality Among Healthy Older Adults
    Sultana Monira Hussain, Anne B. Newman, Lawrence J. Beilin, Andrew M. Tonkin, Robyn L. Woods, Johannes T. Neumann, Mark Nelson, Prudence R. Carr, Christopher M. Reid, Alice Owen, Jocasta Ball, Flavia M. Cicuttini, Cammie Tran, Yuanyuan Wang, Michael E. Er
    JAMA Network Open.2023; 6(4): e237482.     CrossRef
  • Association between Weight Loss and Hand-Grip Strength with Cause-Specific Mortality in Middle-Aged and Older Adults
    Inhwan Lee
    Exercise Science.2023; 32(3): 339.     CrossRef
  • Weight Change and Risk of Atherosclerosis Measured by Carotid Intima–Media Thickness (cIMT) from a Prospective Cohort—Analysis of the First-Wave Follow-Up Data of the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA)
    Jian Liu, Newman Sze, Miya Narushima, Deborah O’Leary
    Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease.2023; 10(10): 435.     CrossRef
  • Weight maintenance and gain were significantly associated with lower risk of all-cause and cancer-related mortality in Korean adults who were newly diagnosed with cancer based on the Korean NHIS-HEALS cohort
    Yong-June Kim, Seung Park, Won Tae Kim, Yoon-Jong Bae, Yonghwan Kim, Hee-Taik Kang
    Medicine.2023; 102(47): e36184.     CrossRef
  • Obesity in Caucasian Seniors on the Rise: Is It Truly Harmful? Results of the PolSenior2 Study
    Monika Puzianowska-Kuznicka, Alina Kurylowicz, Lukasz Wierucki, Aleksander Jerzy Owczarek, Kacper Jagiello, Malgorzata Mossakowska, Tomasz Zdrojewski, Jerzy Chudek
    Nutrients.2022; 14(21): 4621.     CrossRef
  • 4,143 View
  • 84 Download
  • 12 Web of Science
  • 12 Crossref
The Influence of Negative Mental Health on the Health Behavior and the Mortality Risk: Analysis of Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging from 2006 to 2014
Eun Ryeong Jun, Sung Hi Kim, Yoon Jeong Cho, Yun-A Kim, Joo Young Lee
Korean J Fam Med 2019;40(5):297-306.   Published online September 11, 2019
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.18.0068
Background
Several studies have shown that negative mental health increases risky health behavior and mortality risk. We investigated the relationship between mental health and health behavior, and the causal association between mental health and mortality risk.
Methods
We used data from the 8-year (2006–2014) Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging with a cohort of 10,247 individuals (whom we divided into a younger group aged <65 years and an older group aged ≥65 years). Mental health was assessed with the following factors: depression, social engagement, and satisfaction of life. Health behavior was assessed with smoking, alcohol use, and regular exercise. Mortality risk was calculated using survival status and survival months as of 2014. Multiple logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard analysis were performed.
Results
Negative mental health was associated with current smoking and sedentary life style, but not with alcohol consumption. In addition, it was associated with an increase in all-cause mortality risk. The increase in mortality risk in the highest quartile (vs. lowest) was 1.71 times (hazard ratio [HR], 1.71; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12– 2.62) and 2.07 times (HR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.60–2.67) for the younger and older group, respectively.
Conclusion
Our results show that mental health affects health behavior and mortality risk. A key inference from this study is that improving mental health can lead to positive changes in health behavior and reduce the risk of mortality.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Effect of Lifestyle Counselling via a Mobile Application on Disease Activity Control in Inflammatory Arthritis: A Single-Blinded, Randomized Controlled Study
    Türker Kurt, Diana Vossen, Falk Schumacher, Johannes Strunk, Dmytro Fedkov, Christine Peine, Felix Lang, Abdullah Khalil, Ralph Brinks, Stefan Vordenbäumen
    Nutrients.2024; 16(10): 1488.     CrossRef
  • The Moderating Effect of Mental Health on the Relationship Between Cardiovascular Disease Awareness and Health Behaviors of Middle-Aged Korean Chinese Workers With Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Korea
    Yu Zhu Zhang, Seon Young Hwang
    Journal of Transcultural Nursing.2023; 34(2): 131.     CrossRef
  • Combined Effects of Depression and Chronic Disease on the Risk of Mortality: The Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging (2006-2016)
    Hyunji Kim, Sung Hi Kim, Yoon Jeong Cho
    Journal of Korean Medical Science.2021;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • KLoSA—Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging
    Jungun Lee
    Korean Journal of Family Medicine.2020; 41(1): 1.     CrossRef
  • Mortality and cause of death in physical activity and insufficient physical activity participants: a longitudinal follow-up study using a national health screening cohort
    Chanyang Min, Dae Myoung Yoo, Jee Hye Wee, Hyo-Jeong Lee, Soo Hwan Byun, Hyo Geun Choi
    BMC Public Health.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • 6,356 View
  • 98 Download
  • 6 Web of Science
  • 5 Crossref
Socioeconomic Status in Association with Metabolic Syndrome and Coronary Heart Disease Risk
Ji Young Kim, Sung Hi Kim, Yoon Jeong Cho
Korean J Fam Med 2013;34(2):131-138.   Published online March 20, 2013
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2013.34.2.131
Background

The purpose of this study was to examine the association of metabolic syndrome (MS) coronary heart disease (CHD) with socioeconomic status (SES).

Methods

The participants were 2,170 (631 men and 1,539 women), aged over 40 years who had visited for health screening from April to December in 2009. We classified them into three SES levels according to their education and income levels. MS was defined using the criteria of modified National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III and CHD risk was defined using Framingham risk score (FRS) ≥ 10%.

Results

High, middle, and low SES were 12.0%, 73.7%, and 14.3%, respectively. The prevalence of MS was 18.1%. For high, middle, and low SES, after adjusted covariates (age, drinking, smoking, and exercise), odds ratios for MS in men were 1.0, 1.41 (confidence interval [CI], 0.83 to 2.38; P > 0.05), and 1.50 (CI, 0.69 to 3.27; P > 0.05), respectively and in women were 1.0, 1.74 (CI, 1.05 to 3.18; P < 0.05), and 2.81 (CI, 1.46 to 2.43; P < 0.05), respectively. The prevalence of FRS ≥ 10% was 33.5% (adjusted covariates were drinking, smoking, and exercise) and odds ratios for FRS ≥ 10% in men were 1.0, 2.86 (CI, 1.35 to 6.08; P < 0.001), and 3.12 (CI, 1.94 to 5.00; P < 0.001), respectively and in women were 1.0, 3.24 (CI, 1.71 to 6.12; P < 0.001), and 8.80 (CI, 4.50 to 17.23; P < 0.001), respectively.

Conclusion

There was an inverse relationship between SES and FRS ≥ 10% risk in men, and an inverse relationship between SES and both risk of MS and FRS ≥ 10% in women.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • The Impact of Physical Activity on Weight Loss in Relation to the Pillars of Lifestyle Medicine—A Narrative Review
    Natalia Niezgoda, Tomasz Chomiuk, Przemysław Kasiak, Artur Mamcarz, Daniel Śliż
    Nutrients.2025; 17(6): 1095.     CrossRef
  • Anthropometric and Physiological Measures in Individuals With At‐Risk Mental State (ARMS) Compared With Individuals With Schizophrenia: Findings From a Lower Middle‐Income Country
    M. O. Husain, M. Abid, A. B. Khoso, M. Riaz, F. Ahmed, S. Shakoor, S. Lane, N. Husain, G. Foussias, I. Qurashi, I. B. Chaudhry
    Early Intervention in Psychiatry.2025;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Role of sex and gender-related variables in development of metabolic syndrome: A prospective cohort study
    Pouria Alipour, Zahra Azizi, Valeria Raparelli, Colleen M. Norris, Alexandra Kautzky-Willer, Karolina Kublickiene, Maria Trinidad Herrero, Khaled El Emam, Peter Vollenweider, Martin Preisig, Carole Clair, Louise Pilote
    European Journal of Internal Medicine.2024; 121: 63.     CrossRef
  • Association between Metabolic Syndrome and Risk of Hypopharyngeal Cancer: A Nationwide Cohort Study from Korea
    Jeong Wook Kang, Hyeon-Kyoung Cheong, Su Il Kim, Min Kyeong Lee, Young Chan Lee, In-Hwan Oh, Young-Gyu Eun
    Cancers.2023; 15(18): 4454.     CrossRef
  • Quality of diet and odds of metabolic syndrome in Iranian adults: Baseline results from the PERSIAN Kavar cohort study (PKCS)
    Hamid Ghalandari, Moein Askarpour, Mehran Nouri, Ali Reza Safarpour, Mohammad Reza Fattahi, Marzieh Akbarzadeh
    Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases.2023; 33(9): 1760.     CrossRef
  • Prevalence of Metabolic Syndrome in Women After Maternal Complications of Pregnancy: An Observational Cohort Analysis
    Emily Aldridge, Maleesa Pathirana, Melanie Wittwer, Susan Sierp, Shalem Y. Leemaqz, Claire T. Roberts, Gustaaf A. Dekker, Margaret A. Arstall
    Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
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    Emily Aldridge, K. Oliver Schubert, Maleesa Pathirana, Susan Sierp, Shalem Y. Leemaqz, Claire T. Roberts, Gustaaf A. Dekker, Margaret A. Arstall
    BMC Women's Health.2022;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Socioeconomic Disparities in Cardiovascular Health in South Korea
    Chi-Young Lee, Eun-Ok Im
    Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing.2021; 36(1): 8.     CrossRef
  • Machine Learning to Predict the Progression of Bone Mass Loss Associated with Personal Characteristics and a Metabolic Syndrome Scoring Index
    Chao-Hsin Cheng, Ching-Yuan Lin, Tsung-Hsun Cho, Chih-Ming Lin
    Healthcare.2021; 9(8): 948.     CrossRef
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    Ming-Shu Chen, Chi-Hao Chiu, Shih-Hsin Chen
    BMJ Open.2021; 11(12): e042802.     CrossRef
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    Agne Braziene, Abdonas Tamsiunas, Dalia Luksiene, Ricardas Radisauskas, Sandra Andrusaityte, Audrius Dedele, Jone Vencloviene
    Journal of Public Health.2020; 42(2): e142.     CrossRef
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    European Journal of Preventive Cardiology.2020; 27(7): 749.     CrossRef
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    Michael O. Gabriel, Maria Nikou, Oluwole B. Akinola, Daniela D. Pollak, Spyridon Sideromenos
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    Chih-Ming Lin
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2020; 17(10): 3348.     CrossRef
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    BMC Public Health.2020;[Epub]     CrossRef
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    Alemu Gebrie
    Diabetes & Metabolic Syndrome: Clinical Research & Reviews.2020; 14(5): 1551.     CrossRef
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    Chi-Young Lee, Yong-Hwan Lee
    Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health.2019; 52(5): 281.     CrossRef
  • Life Course Effects of Socioeconomic and Lifestyle Factors on Metabolic Syndrome and 10-Year Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Longitudinal Study in Taiwan Adults
    Chen-Mao Liao, Chih-Ming Lin
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health.2018; 15(10): 2178.     CrossRef
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    C. Toppe, A. Möllsten, S. Schön, G. Dahlquist
    Diabetic Medicine.2017; 34(5): 676.     CrossRef
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    Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.2017; 71(8): 806.     CrossRef
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  • 5,223 View
  • 24 Download
  • 24 Crossref
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