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March 2002
Sugars and micronutrient intake in normal
adults aged 65 years and over
ABSTRACT
Dietary sugars and micronutrient dilution
in normal adults aged 65 years and over.
Gibson S.
Public Health Nutrition, December 2001; 4(6): 1235-1244.
Objective: To examine the relationship between
non-milk extrinsic sugars (NMES) concentration and micronutrient
intakes and status in free-living older people.
Design: The National Diet and Nutrition Survey
of people aged 65 years and over; a cross-sectional study in Britain
in 1994/5.
Subjects and Methods: Eight hundred and six men
and women living in private households who were not on medication
for nutritional disorders. Subjects were classified into four groups
(Q1 to Q4), using cut-off points corresponding to quartiles of energy
from NMES. Relationships were examined between dietary NMES concentration
and intakes of calcium, iron, riboflavin, folate, vitamin C and
vitamin D. Status indices were also assessed in each group.
Results: Overall, a small proportion of men and
women had intakes below the Lower Reference Nutrient Intake (LRNI)
for calcium, iron, folate, riboflavin or vitamin C, while vitamin
D intakes were universally low. Intakes of micronutrients tended
to be highest at moderate levels of NMES in the diet (Q2 and Q3,
equivalent to 8-15% of energy from NMES). Micronutrient status was
low for riboflavin in 38% of the sample, while 15% had low vitamin
C status and more than 10% were anaemic. There was little evidence
that poorer nutrient status was associated with higher levels of
dietary NMES. Although some indices of folate status were lower
in Q4, this is most likely to reflect confounding by smoking. Energy
intake accounted for 20-40% of the variance in micronutrient intakes,
compared with less than 5% for NMES concentration.
Conclusions: A diet moderately high in NMES (up to around 15% of
energy) is unlikely to have a detrimental impact on micronutrient
intake or status in this age group. Energy intake is the major determinant
of micronutrient adequacy.
Link
to abstract
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