Darmon Nicole, Darmon Michel, Maillot Matthieu, Drewnowski Adam
Institut Scientifique et Technique de la Nutrition et de l'Alimentation, Paris, France.
J Am Diet Assoc. 2005 Dec;105(12):1881-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jada.2005.09.005.
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2005 recommended that consumers give priority to nutrient-dense foods, those that contain substantial amounts of key nutrients in relation to the dietary energy they provide. This study developed a scoring system to estimate the nutritional adequacy of vegetables and fruits, on a per weight, per calorie, and per unit cost basis.
We used a French national food composition database for 637 foods, including 129 vegetables and fruits. Mean national retail prices were obtained for each food.
The nutrient adequacy score was defined as the mean of percent daily values for 16 nutrients, based on 100 g of food. The nutrient density score and the nutrient-to-price ratio were the mean of percent daily values for 16 nutrients, expressed per 100 kcal and per 1 euro of food, respectively. Relationships between energy density of vegetables and fruits, nutrient adequacy score, nutrient density score, and nutrient-to-price ratio were tested using linear regression.
Energy density and nutrient density score were negatively correlated, confirming the widely accepted notion that energy-dense foods tend to be nutrient-poor. As expected, fruits and vegetables had the highest nutrient density score because they were nutrient-rich in relation to their low energy content. They also had a relatively high nutrient-to-price ratio, showing that they provided nutrients at a reasonable cost when compared with other foods.
Foods ranked differently when nutritional adequacy was calculated per weight (nutrient adequacy score), per calorie (nutrient density score), or per unit cost (nutrient-to-price ratio). The present results showed that although fruits and vegetables are an expensive source of dietary energy, they provide key nutrients at a reasonable cost.
《2005年美国膳食指南》建议消费者优先选择营养密集型食物,即那些与所提供的膳食能量相比含有大量关键营养素的食物。本研究开发了一种评分系统,以按重量、按卡路里和按单位成本估算蔬菜和水果的营养充足性。
我们使用了一个包含637种食物的法国国家食物成分数据库,其中包括129种蔬菜和水果。获取了每种食物的全国平均零售价格。
营养充足性得分定义为基于100克食物的16种营养素每日摄入量百分比的平均值。营养密度得分和营养价格比分别是基于每100千卡食物和每1欧元食物的16种营养素每日摄入量百分比的平均值。使用线性回归测试蔬菜和水果的能量密度、营养充足性得分、营养密度得分以及营养价格比之间的关系。
能量密度与营养密度得分呈负相关,证实了能量密集型食物往往营养匮乏这一广泛接受的观点。正如预期的那样,水果和蔬菜的营养密度得分最高,因为相对于其低能量含量而言,它们富含营养。它们还具有相对较高的营养价格比,表明与其他食物相比,它们以合理的成本提供营养。
按重量(营养充足性得分)、按卡路里(营养密度得分)或按单位成本(营养价格比)计算营养充足性时,食物的排名不同。目前的结果表明,尽管水果和蔬菜是膳食能量的昂贵来源,但它们以合理的成本提供关键营养素。