Wham Carol, Teh Ruth, Moyes Simon A, Rolleston Anna, Muru-Lanning Marama, Hayman Karen, Adamson Ashley, Kerse Ngaire
1School of Food and Nutrition,College of Health,Massey University,North Shore, Auckland 0745,New Zealand.
2Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences,University of Auckland,Tamaki Campus,Auckland 1142,New Zealand.
Br J Nutr. 2016 Sep;116(6):1103-15. doi: 10.1017/S0007114516003020. Epub 2016 Aug 22.
As part of the 12-month follow-up of the longitudinal cohort study, Life and Living in Advanced Age: A Cohort Study in New Zealand, dietary intake was assessed in 216 Māori and 362 non-Māori octogenarians using repeat 24-h multiple pass recalls. Energy and macronutrient intakes were calculated, and food items reported were allocated to food groups used in the New Zealand Adult Nutrition Survey (NZANS). Intakes were compared with the nutrient reference values (NRV) for Australia and New Zealand. The median BMI was higher for Māori (28·3 kg/m2) than for non-Māori (26·2 kg/m2) P=0·007. For Māori, median energy intake was 7·44 MJ/d for men and 6·06 MJ/d for women with 16·3 % energy derived from protein, 43·3 % from carbohydrate and 38·5 % from fat. Median energy intake was 7·91 and 6·26 MJ/d for non-Māori men and women, respectively, with 15·4 % of energy derived from protein, 45 % from carbohydrate and 36·7 % from fat. For both ethnic groups, bread was the top contributor to energy and carbohydrate intakes. Protein came from beef and veal, fish and seafood, bread, milk and poultry with the order differing by ethnic groups and sex. Fat came mainly from butter and margarine. Energy-adjusted protein was higher for Māori than non-Māori (P=0·049). For both ethnic groups, the median energy levels were similar, percent carbohydrate tended to be lower and percent fat higher compared with adults aged >70 years in NZANS. These unique cross-sectional data address an important gap in our understanding of dietary intake in this growing section of our population and highlight lack of age-appropriate NRV.
作为纵向队列研究“高龄生活:新西兰队列研究”为期12个月随访的一部分,采用重复的24小时多次回顾法,对216名毛利族和362名非毛利族八旬老人的饮食摄入量进行了评估。计算了能量和常量营养素摄入量,并将报告的食物项目归入新西兰成人营养调查(NZANS)所使用的食物类别。将摄入量与澳大利亚和新西兰的营养素参考值(NRV)进行了比较。毛利族的中位体重指数(BMI)(28.3kg/m²)高于非毛利族(26.2kg/m²),P=0.007。对于毛利族,男性的中位能量摄入量为7.44MJ/天,女性为6.06MJ/天,其中16.3%的能量来自蛋白质,43.3%来自碳水化合物,38.5%来自脂肪。非毛利族男性和女性的中位能量摄入量分别为7.91MJ/天和6.26MJ/天,其中15.4%的能量来自蛋白质,45%来自碳水化合物,36.7%来自脂肪。对于这两个种族群体,面包都是能量和碳水化合物摄入量的主要贡献者。蛋白质来自牛肉和小牛肉、鱼类和海鲜、面包、牛奶和家禽,其顺序因种族群体和性别而异。脂肪主要来自黄油和人造黄油。毛利族经能量调整后的蛋白质摄入量高于非毛利族(P=0.049)。对于这两个种族群体来说,与NZANS中70岁以上的成年人相比,中位能量水平相似,碳水化合物百分比往往较低,脂肪百分比较高。这些独特的横断面数据填补了我们在了解这一不断增长的人群饮食摄入量方面的一个重要空白,并凸显了缺乏适合该年龄段的NRV。