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The scientists screened potential participants in
the bone study by using a measurement tool called a dual x-ray absorptiometer,
or DXA, to measure bone mineral density. Photo shows nutritionist Fariba
Roughead (right) using a DXA for an earlier nutrition study. Click the
image for more information about it.
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Dietary Protein and Bone Health Revisited
By Rosalie Marion
Bliss
February 16, 2005 Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists first compared high-meat
protein diets with low-meat protein diets. Now, they've compared animal-protein
diets with vegetable-protein diets. This "sequel" study rocks the
foundation, again, of a commonly held belief that high-protein diets can be bad
for bones.
ARS scientists in the
Grand
Forks [N.D.] Human Nutrition Research Center conducted the study. The
findings were published in January in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology
& Metabolism. ARS is the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.
Nutritionists
Zamzam
(Fariba) Roughead and
Janet
Hunt, with colleagues, carefully controlled the diets of 13 healthy,
postmenopausal women. Two seven-week experimental diets were provided to each
of the volunteers. A two-week break was scheduled between each of the two diet
phases.
Both diets provided 15 percent of energy--or daily caloric intake--from
protein, a percentage that represents average U.S. consumption. One diet
contained mostly meat protein, and the other substituted 25 grams of
high-isoflavone soy protein for an equivalent amount of the meat protein
provided daily. The remainder of each diet was mixed to represent typical daily
intakes of calcium and other nutrients.
The scientists measured biomarkers in blood and urine collected during each
seven-week diet phase and found no indications of differences in calcium or
bone metabolism after eating either diet. Moreover, the soy-protein-substituted
diet did not change the absorption or excretion of calcium.
Some scientists long have theorized that high-meat protein diets can leach
calcium from bones. Others theorize that the phytate, a component of soy
protein, can interrupt mineral absorption in general.
The study's findings suggest that calcium absorption from these two
important sources of dietary protein is similar.