Louie Jimmy Chun Yu, Tapsell Linda C
J.C.Y. Louie and L.C. Tapsell are with the School of Medicine, Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health, The University of Wollongong, Australia.J.C.Y. Louie is with the School of Molecular Bioscience, Faculty of Science, The University of Sydney, Australia.
Nutr Rev. 2015 Dec;73(12):837-57. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuv044. Epub 2015 Oct 7.
Given its potential effect on nutrient and energy density, the sugar content of the diet is a subject of controversy.
The aim of this review was to examine the cross-sectional or prospective evidence for associations between the intake of total sugar or added sugar (high vs low intakes) and diet quality or nutrient intakes in the general population.
The following databases were searched for English-language articles published between 1972 and 2012: CINAHL Plus, EBM Reviews, ERIC, MEDLINE, PREMEDLINE, PsycINFO, PubMed, and ScienceDirect.
The search identified studies that examined the association between intake of total sugar and/or added sugar and diet quality (n = 22) or nutrient intakes (n = 30).
The following data were extracted: sample size and population, dietary assessment method, source of added sugar data, source of funding, comparator, association between total sugar or added sugar and diet quality, and the direction and magnitude of the association.
Of 22 studies, all except 1 found a higher intake of added sugar to be associated with poorer diet quality, and the exceptional study did not adjust for total energy intake. Twenty-one of 30 studies found a negative association between added sugar and micronutrient intakes. The same association was not found for total sugar intake.
Any negative association between dietary sugar and diet quality is better exposed by referring to added sugar rather than total sugar. There was substantial variation in features of study quality, including sample size, so the magnitude of the observed effect was generally small and may not be of clinical significance. Furthermore, the positive influence that core foods such as fruit and milk exert on total sugar values may bias the association between total sugar and diet quality.
鉴于其对营养和能量密度的潜在影响,饮食中的糖含量一直是一个有争议的话题。
本综述的目的是研究总糖或添加糖摄入量(高摄入量与低摄入量)与普通人群饮食质量或营养素摄入量之间关联的横断面或前瞻性证据。
检索了以下数据库中1972年至2012年间发表的英文文章:护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL Plus)、循证医学评价数据库(EBM Reviews)、教育资源信息中心数据库(ERIC)、医学索引数据库(MEDLINE)、医学预印本数据库(PREMEDLINE)、心理学文摘数据库(PsycINFO)、美国国立医学图书馆生物医学数据库(PubMed)和科学Direct数据库。
检索到的研究考察了总糖和/或添加糖摄入量与饮食质量(n = 22)或营养素摄入量(n = 30)之间的关联。
提取了以下数据:样本量和人群、饮食评估方法、添加糖数据来源、资金来源、对照、总糖或添加糖与饮食质量之间的关联以及关联的方向和程度。
在22项研究中,除1项研究外,所有研究均发现添加糖摄入量较高与较差的饮食质量相关,而该项例外研究未对总能量摄入进行调整。30项研究中有21项发现添加糖与微量营养素摄入量之间存在负相关。总糖摄入量未发现相同的关联。
通过提及添加糖而非总糖,饮食糖与饮食质量之间的任何负相关关系能得到更好的体现。研究质量特征存在很大差异,包括样本量,因此观察到的效应大小一般较小,可能不具有临床意义。此外,水果和牛奶等核心食物对总糖值产生的积极影响可能会使总糖与饮食质量之间的关联产生偏差。