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Protein/energy ratios of current diets in developed and developing countries compared with a safe protein/energy ratio: implications for recommended protein and amino acid intakes

机译:发达国家和发展中国家当前饮食中的蛋白质/能量比与安全的蛋白质/能量比:对建议蛋白质和氨基酸摄入量的影响

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Revised estimates of protein and amino acid requirements are under discussion by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)/World Health Organizaion (WHO), and have been proposed in a recent report on Dietary Reference Intakes (DRIs) from the USA. The nature and magnitude of these requirements are not entirely resolved, and no consideration has been given to the potential influence of metabolic adaptation on dietary requirements. We have examined the implications of these new values, and of the conceptual metabolic framework in which they are used, for defining the nutritional adequacy of protein intakes in developed and developing countries. We have expressed proposed values for protein requirements in relation to energy requirements, predicted for physical activity levels of 1.5, 1.75 and 2.0 times basal metabolic rate, in order to generate reference ratios for protein energy/total energy (reference P/E ratio) as a function of age, body weight, gender and physical activity level. Proposed values for amino acid requirements have been used to adjust the available digestible P/E ratio of foods and diets for protein quality. Focusing on the diets of UK omnivores and vegetarians and on diets in India, the risk of protein deficiency is evaluated from a comparison of P/E ratios of metabolic requirements with protein-quality-adjusted P/E ratios of intakes. A qualitative and conservative estimate of risk of deficiency is made by comparing the adjusted P/E ratio of the intake with a reference P/E ratio calculated for age, body weight, gender and physical activity according to FAO/WHO/United Nations University. A semi-quantitative estimate of risk of deficiency has also been made by the cut point approach, calculated as the proportion of the intake distribution below the mean P/E ratio of the requirement. Values for the quality-adjusted P/E ratio of the diet range from 0.126 for the UK omnivore diet to 0.054 for a rice-based diet of adults in West Bengal, which is lysine-limited, falling to 0.050 for 1-year-old children. The reference P/E ratio for men and women increases with age, is higher for females than males, is higher for small compared with large adults at any age and decreases with physical activity. Thus if a particular diet is potentially limiting in protein, protein deficiency is most likely in large, elderly sedentary women followed by the adolescent female and least likely in moderately active young children, the opposite of what has usually been assumed. Within the currently accepted framework, the diets do not meet the protein needs of the entire population of the UK, have a significant risk of deficiency throughout India for all except extremely active small adults, and are grossly inadequate for all population groups, apart from physically active young children in West Bengal, regardless of body weight or level of food intake. The lysine limitation of the cereal-based Indian diets is dependent on the choice of lysine requirement values from the published range. We consider that the value selected is too high, because of uncertainties and inconsistencies in the approaches used. A more appropriate choice from the lower end of the range would remove the lysine limitation of cereal-based diets, and reduce some of the perceived risk of deficiency. However, diets remain limited by the amount of digestible protein for many population groups, especially in West Bengal. In the context of risk management, one option would be to accept the current values and the conceptual metabolic framework within which they have been derived. This would have major implications for the supplies of high-quality protein to the developing countries. An alternative option would be to re-evaluate the currently proposed values for the requirements for protein and amino acids. We conclude that the choice of values for the adult lysine requirement should be re-evaluated and that serious consideration should be given to the extent to which adaptive mechanisms might enable the metabolic requirement for protein to be met from current intakes. This will entail a better understanding of the relationships between dietary protein and health.
机译:粮食和农业组织(FAO)/世界卫生组织(WHO)正在讨论蛋白质和氨基酸需求的修订估算,并且在美国有关膳食参考摄入量(DRI)的最新报告中提出了这一建议。这些需求的性质和大小尚未完全解决,也没有考虑代谢适应对饮食需求的潜在影响。我们已经研究了这些新值的含义,以及在定义发达国家和发展中国家蛋白质摄入的营养充足性时所使用的概念性代谢框架的含义。为了表达蛋白质能量/总能量的参考比(参考P / E比),我们已经提出了与能量需求相关的蛋白质需求的建议值,预测了基础代谢率的1.5、1.75和2.0倍的体力活动水平。年龄,体重,性别和体育锻炼水平的函数。氨基酸需求的建议值已用于调整食品和饮食中蛋白质质量的可用可消化P / E比。重点关注英国杂食动物和素食者的饮食以及印度的饮食,通过比较代谢需求的P / E比与蛋白质质量调整后的摄入P / E比来评估蛋白质缺乏的风险。通过将摄入量的调整后市盈率与根据粮农组织/世卫组织/联合国大学计算的年龄,体重,性别和体育活动的参考市盈率进行比较,对缺乏风险进行定性和保守的估计。切入点方法还对缺乏风险进行了半定量估计,计算方法为摄入量分布的比例低于需求的平均市盈率。饮食质量调整后的P / E值的范围从英国杂食饮食的0.126到西孟加拉邦成人基于稻米的饮食的0.054(赖氨酸限制),降至1岁儿童的0.050。孩子们。在任何年龄段,男女的参考P / E比率均随年龄增加而增加,女性高于男性,与成年人相比,较小的人的P / E比率较高,并且随着体育锻炼而减少。因此,如果特定饮食可能会限制蛋白质的摄入,则大型,久坐的久坐女性,其次是青春期女性,最有可能是蛋白质缺乏,这与通常认为的相反。在目前公认的框架内,这些饮食不能满足英国整个人口的蛋白质需求,除了极度活跃的小成年人外,所有印度人都有严重的饮食不足风险,除了身体上的饮食外,所有人群的饮食均严重不足西孟加拉邦活跃的幼儿,无论体重或食物摄入水平如何。谷物基印度饮食中赖氨酸的限制取决于赖氨酸需求量值在已公开范围内的选择。我们认为选择的值太高,因为所使用的方法存在不确定性和不一致之处。从该范围的下限中选择一个更合适的方法将消除谷类食品中赖氨酸的限制,并减少某些缺乏的风险。但是,许多人群,特别是在西孟加拉邦,饮食仍然受到可消化蛋白质含量的限制。在风险管理的背景下,一种选择是接受当前值和在其中衍生出它们的概念性代谢框架。这将对向发展中国家供应高质量蛋白质产生重大影响。另一种选择是重新评估当前建议的蛋白质和氨基酸要求值。我们得出的结论是,应重新评估成人赖氨酸需求量的值选择,并应认真考虑适应性机制可能在多大程度上使目前的摄入量满足蛋白质的代谢需求。这将需要更好地了解饮食蛋白质与健康之间的关系。

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