Mangano Kelsey M, Sahni Shivani, Kiel Douglas P, Tucker Katherine L, Dufour Alyssa B, Hannan Marian T
Department of Biomedical and Nutritional Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Lowell, MA;
The Institute for Aging Research, Hebrew Senior Life, Boston, MA; and.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2017 Mar;105(3):714-722. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.116.136762. Epub 2017 Feb 8.
Above-average dietary protein, as a single nutrient, improves musculoskeletal health. Evaluating the link between dietary protein and musculoskeletal health from a whole-diet perspective is important, as dietary guidelines focus on dietary patterns. We examined the prospective association of novel dietary protein food clusters (derived from established dietary pattern techniques) with appendicular lean mass (ALM), quadriceps strength (QS), and bone mineral density (BMD) in 2986 men and women, aged 19-72 y, from the Framingham Third Generation Study. Total protein intake was estimated by food-frequency questionnaire in 2002-2005. A cluster analysis was used to classify participants into mutually exclusive groups, which were determined by using the percentage of contribution of food intake to overall protein intake. General linear modeling was used to ) estimate the association between protein intake (grams per day) and BMD, ALM, appendicular lean mass normalized for height (ALM/ht), and QS (2008-2011) and to ) calculate adjusted least-squares mean outcomes across quartiles of protein (grams per day) and protein food clusters. The mean ± SD age of subjects was 40 ± 9 y; 82% of participants met the Recommended Daily Allowance (0.8 g · kg body weight · d). The following 6 dietary protein food clusters were identified: fast food and full-fat dairy, fish, red meat, chicken, low-fat milk, and legumes. BMD was not different across quartiles of protein intake (-trend range = 0.32-0.82); but significant positive trends were observed for ALM, ALM/ht ( < 0.001), and QS ( = 0.0028). Individuals in the lowest quartile of total protein intake (quartile 1) had significantly lower ALM, ALM/ht, and QS than did those in the higher quartiles of intake (quartiles 2-4; ( ranges = 0.0001-0.003, 0.0007-0.003, and 0.009-0.05, respectively). However, there were no associations between protein clusters and any musculoskeletal outcome in adjusted models. In a protein-replete cohort of adults, dietary protein is associated with ALM and QS but not with BMD. In this study, dietary protein food patterns do not provide further insight into beneficial protein effects on muscle outcomes.
作为单一营养素,高于平均水平的膳食蛋白质可改善肌肉骨骼健康。从整体饮食角度评估膳食蛋白质与肌肉骨骼健康之间的联系很重要,因为膳食指南关注的是饮食模式。我们在弗雷明汉第三代研究中,对2986名年龄在19 - 72岁的男性和女性,研究了新型膳食蛋白质食物簇(源自既定的饮食模式技术)与附属瘦体重(ALM)、股四头肌力量(QS)和骨矿物质密度(BMD)之间的前瞻性关联。通过2002 - 2005年的食物频率问卷估计总蛋白质摄入量。采用聚类分析将参与者分为相互排斥的组,这些组由食物摄入量对总蛋白质摄入量的贡献百分比确定。使用一般线性模型来估计蛋白质摄入量(每天克数)与BMD、ALM、身高标准化的附属瘦体重(ALM/ht)和QS(2008 - 2011年)之间的关联,并计算蛋白质(每天克数)四分位数和蛋白质食物簇的调整后最小二乘均值结果。受试者的平均年龄±标准差为40±9岁;82%的参与者达到了推荐每日摄入量(0.8克·千克体重·天)。确定了以下6种膳食蛋白质食物簇:快餐和全脂乳制品、鱼类、红肉、鸡肉、低脂牛奶和豆类。蛋白质摄入量四分位数之间的BMD没有差异(-趋势范围 = 0.32 - 0.82);但观察到ALM、ALM/ht(<0.001)和QS(=0.0028)有显著的正趋势。总蛋白质摄入量处于最低四分位数(四分位数1)的个体,其ALM、ALM/ht和QS显著低于摄入量较高四分位数(四分位数2 - 4)的个体(范围分别为0.0001 - 0.003、0.0007 - 0.003和0.009 - 0.05)。然而,在调整模型中,蛋白质簇与任何肌肉骨骼结果之间均无关联。在蛋白质充足的成人群体中,膳食蛋白质与ALM和QS相关,但与BMD无关。在本研究中,膳食蛋白质食物模式并未提供关于蛋白质对肌肉结果有益作用的进一步见解。