Department of Organization and Consumption Economics, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, Warsaw University of Life Sciences; 02-787 Warsaw, Poland.
Nutrients. 2018 Dec 13;10(12):1977. doi: 10.3390/nu10121977.
The aim of this study was to identify the food sources of protein and 18 amino acids (AAs) in the average Polish diet. The analysis was conducted based on the 2016 Household Budget Survey (HBS) on the consumption of food products from a representative sample of 38,886 households ( = 99,230). This survey was organized, conducted and controlled by the Central Statistical Office, Social Surveys and Living Conditions Statistics Department in cooperation with the Statistic Office in Łódź based on the recording of expenditures, quantitative consumption, and revenues in budget books for one month. 91 food products from 13 food categories (e.g., meat and meat products, grain products) consisting of 42 food groups (e.g., red meat, milk, cheese) were analyzed to determine protein and amino acid intake from these products. Three categories delivered 80.9% of total protein (meat and meat products: 38.9%; grain products: 23.9%; and milk and dairy products: 18.1%). The branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs: leucine, isoleucine and valine) were delivered mainly by meat and meat products (39.9%; 41.3% and 37.4%, respectively). Meat and meat products were also the most important source for other essential amino acids (EAAs: lysine 49.2%, histidine 46.6%, threonine 44.7%, tryptophan 41.4%, phenylalanine 35.3%, and methionine 44.2%). In terms of the contribution of the non-essential or conditionally essential amino acids to the average Polish diet, most important were grain products (for cysteine: 41.2%; glutamic acid: 33.8%; proline: 34.1%), and meat and meat products (for tyrosine: 38.3%; arginine: 46.1%; alanine: 48.7%; aspartic acid: 41.7%; glycine: 52.5%; serine: 33.6%). Five clusters were identified to assess the impact of socio-demographic and economic factors on the protein supply. The largest impact was observed for respondent education, degree of urbanization, study month, and usage of agricultural land. The shares of animal food in total protein supply amounted to 66.5% in total population and varied from 56.4% to 73.6% in different clusters.
本研究旨在确定波兰人日常饮食中蛋白质和 18 种氨基酸(AA)的食物来源。分析基于 2016 年家庭预算调查(HBS),对来自 38886 个家庭(=99230 人)的代表性样本中食品的消费情况进行了分析。该调查由中央统计局、社会调查和生活条件统计司组织、开展和控制,与罗兹统计局合作,基于对一个月内预算簿中支出、定量消费和收入的记录。分析了来自 13 个食品类别的 91 种食品(如肉类和肉类产品、谷物产品),包括 42 个食品组(如红肉、牛奶、奶酪),以确定这些产品中的蛋白质和氨基酸摄入量。三大类食品提供了总蛋白质的 80.9%(肉类和肉类产品:38.9%;谷物产品:23.9%;以及牛奶和奶制品:18.1%)。支链氨基酸(BCAA:亮氨酸、异亮氨酸和缬氨酸)主要来自肉类和肉类产品(分别为 39.9%、41.3%和 37.4%)。肉类和肉类产品也是其他必需氨基酸(EAA:赖氨酸 49.2%、组氨酸 46.6%、苏氨酸 44.7%、色氨酸 41.4%、苯丙氨酸 35.3%和蛋氨酸 44.2%)的最重要来源。就非必需或条件必需氨基酸对波兰人日常饮食的贡献而言,最重要的是谷物产品(半胱氨酸:41.2%;谷氨酸:33.8%;脯氨酸:34.1%)和肉类和肉类产品(酪氨酸:38.3%;精氨酸:46.1%;丙氨酸:48.7%;天冬氨酸:41.7%;甘氨酸:52.5%;丝氨酸:33.6%)。确定了五个聚类来评估社会人口和经济因素对蛋白质供应的影响。受访者的教育程度、城市化程度、学习月份和农业用地的使用对结果的影响最大。动物食品在总蛋白质供应中的份额在总人口中达到 66.5%,在不同聚类中从 56.4%到 73.6%不等。