部分低收入国家幼儿的膳食蛋白质摄入量与健康儿童的估计需求量相比基本充足,但辅助食品摄入量较低时除外。

The Journal of Nutrition Health and Aging Pub Date : 2017-05-01 Epub Date: 2017-02-15 DOI:10.3945/jn.116.239657
Joanne E Arsenault, Kenneth H Brown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:以往的研究表明,低收入国家(LICs)幼儿的蛋白质摄入量普遍高于已公布的蛋白质需求量,但这些研究并未考虑到基于氨基酸组合和摄入蛋白质消化率的蛋白质质量:我们的目标是在考虑蛋白质质量的情况下,估计低收入国家幼儿蛋白质和氨基酸摄入不足的普遍程度:重新分析了 6 个低收入国家(秘鲁、危地马拉、厄瓜多尔、孟加拉国、乌干达和赞比亚)儿童(6-35 个月)膳食摄入量的 7 组数据,以估算蛋白质和氨基酸摄入量并评估其充足性。计算每个儿童膳食的蛋白质消化率校正氨基酸得分,并乘以原始(粗)蛋白质摄入量,得出可用蛋白质摄入量的估计值。根据 "估计平均需求量 "得出通常摄入量的分布情况,从而估算出每个队列中蛋白质和氨基酸摄入量不足的普遍程度:结果:6-8 个月的母乳喂养儿童蛋白质摄入不足的比例最高:24% 的孟加拉国儿童和 16% 的秘鲁儿童。除孟加拉国外,9-12 个月大的儿童蛋白质摄入不足的比例有所下降,12 个月大后所有地区的比例都很低(0-2%)。儿童蛋白质摄入不足 结论:总体而言,除年龄较小的母乳喂养儿童辅食摄入量较低外,大多数儿童的蛋白质摄入量都高于需求量。这些发现强化了之前的证据,即与健康儿童的估计需求量相比,即使考虑到蛋白质的质量,低收入国家儿童的膳食蛋白质摄入量一般也不会受到限制。然而,感染和肠道功能紊乱对儿童蛋白质需求量的影响尚未测量,这可能会改变这一结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Dietary Protein Intake in Young Children in Selected Low-Income Countries Is Generally Adequate in Relation to Estimated Requirements for Healthy Children, Except When Complementary Food Intake Is Low.

Background: Previous research indicates that young children in low-income countries (LICs) generally consume greater amounts of protein than published estimates of protein requirements, but this research did not account for protein quality based on the mix of amino acids and the digestibility of ingested protein.Objective: Our objective was to estimate the prevalence of inadequate protein and amino acid intake by young children in LICs, accounting for protein quality.Methods: Seven data sets with information on dietary intake for children (6-35 mo of age) from 6 LICs (Peru, Guatemala, Ecuador, Bangladesh, Uganda, and Zambia) were reanalyzed to estimate protein and amino acid intake and assess adequacy. The protein digestibility-corrected amino acid score of each child's diet was calculated and multiplied by the original (crude) protein intake to obtain an estimate of available protein intake. Distributions of usual intake were obtained to estimate the prevalence of inadequate protein and amino acid intake for each cohort according to Estimated Average Requirements.Results: The prevalence of inadequate protein intake was highest in breastfeeding children aged 6-8 mo: 24% of Bangladeshi and 16% of Peruvian children. With the exception of Bangladesh, the prevalence of inadequate available protein intake decreased by age 9-12 mo and was very low in all sites (0-2%) after 12 mo of age. Inadequate protein intake in children <12 mo of age was due primarily to low energy intake from complementary foods, not inadequate protein density.Conclusions: Overall, most children consumed protein amounts greater than requirements, except for the younger breastfeeding children, who were consuming low amounts of complementary foods. These findings reinforce previous evidence that dietary protein is not generally limiting for children in LICs compared with estimated requirements for healthy children, even after accounting for protein quality. However, unmeasured effects of infection and intestinal dysfunction on the children's protein requirements could modify this conclusion.

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