Storz Maximilian Andreas, Kowarschik Stefanie, Herter Julian, Huber Roman
Department of Internal Medicine II, Centre for Complementary Medicine, Medical Center - University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
Eur J Nutr. 2025 Sep 18;64(6):280. doi: 10.1007/s00394-025-03778-8.
Lower white blood cell, neutrophil and lymphocyte counts have been reported in vegetarians. However, studies on this topic revealed conflicting results and most observations stem from small studies using convenience sampling techniques. Additional large studies investigating associations between vegetarian diets and whole blood count (WBC) data are thus warranted.
We examined WBC and hematological parameters in US vegetarians based on complex, multistage, probability sampling design-based data from the cross-sectional National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES). Crude and multivariable regression-adjusted cell counts were compared between lacto-ovo-vegetarians (LOVs), semi-vegetarians (SVGs) and omnivores.
The analysis included n = 8232 unweighted observations, thereof n = 98 LOVs and n = 110 SVGs. Vegetarians were characterized by a younger age, a healthier BMI, and a higher proportion of females. Crude and adjusted white blood cell counts were lower in LOVs but did not differ significantly from omnivores. Except for lower red blood cell counts and hemoglobin levels in vegetarians, no significant between group differences in WBC data were found. White blood cell counts correlated significantly with the BMI and selenium intake in LOVs (r = 0.27 for both). Each additional µg of dietary vitamin B12 was associated with an increase in white blood cells by 0.11*1000 cells/µl in vegetarians.
While hemogram alterations were directionally consistent with previous studies, differences in white blood cells and neutrophils were not significant between NHANES vegetarians and omnivores. Statistical and design-specific aspects as well the elevated BMI in the vegetarian subpopulation could serve as potential explanations.
据报道,素食者的白细胞、中性粒细胞和淋巴细胞计数较低。然而,关于这一主题的研究结果相互矛盾,且大多数观察结果来自采用便利抽样技术的小型研究。因此,有必要进行更多大型研究来调查素食饮食与全血细胞计数(WBC)数据之间的关联。
我们基于横断面国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)中基于复杂、多阶段、概率抽样设计的数据,对美国素食者的白细胞和血液学参数进行了研究。比较了乳蛋素食者(LOV)、半素食者(SVG)和杂食者的原始细胞计数和多变量回归调整后的细胞计数。
分析纳入了n = 8232个未加权观察值,其中n = 98名LOV和n = 110名SVG。素食者的特点是年龄较小、BMI更健康且女性比例更高。LOV的原始白细胞计数和调整后白细胞计数较低,但与杂食者无显著差异。除素食者的红细胞计数和血红蛋白水平较低外,未发现白细胞数据在组间有显著差异。LOV的白细胞计数与BMI和硒摄入量显著相关(两者r = 0.27)。素食者每额外摄入1μg膳食维生素B12,白细胞增加0.11×1000个细胞/μl。
虽然血常规变化与先前研究在方向上一致,但NHANES中的素食者和杂食者在白细胞和中性粒细胞方面的差异并不显著。统计和设计方面的因素以及素食亚人群中升高的BMI可能是潜在原因。