Aging Well

More Proof Protein Is Good as We Age

On March 5th 2014, I posted an item on ThirdAge.com that dealt with the misleading title of a press release that went viral: “Meat and cheese may be as bad as smoking”. The study the release referred to actually showed that for people over 65, animal protein is protective. Now a Japanese study published in the March 2014 Journal of the American Geriatrics Society confirms that a diet high in protein, particularly animal protein, may help elderly individuals function at higher levels physically, psychologically, and socially.

A release from the publisher notes that due to increasing life expectancies in many countries, increasing numbers of elderly people are living with functional decline in cognitive ability and activities of daily living. Functional decline can have profound effects on health and the economy.

The research suggests that aging may reduce the body's ability to absorb or process proteins, which could mean that protein requirements increase with age. Megumi Tsubota-Utsugi, PhD, MPH, RD, of the National Institute of Health and Nutrition in Japan, and her colleagues in Tohoku University and Teikyo University, Japan, wondered whether protein intake might affect the functional capabilities of the elderly. They designed a study to investigate the relationship between protein intake and future decline in higher-level functional capacity in older community-dwelling adults in the Japanese general population. Their analysis included 1,007 individuals with an average age of 67.4 years who completed food questionnaires at the start of the study and seven years later. Participants were divided into quartiles according to intake levels of total, animal, and plant protein. Tests of higher-level functional capacity included social and intellectual aspects as well as measures related to activities of daily living.

Men in the highest quartile of animal protein intake had a 39 percent decreased odds of experiencing higher-level functional decline than those in the lowest quartile. These associations were not seen in women. No consistent association was observed between plant protein intake and future higher-level functional decline in either sex.

The release quotes Dr. Tsubota-Utsugi as saying, "Identifying nutritional factors that contribute to maintaining higher-level functional capacity is important for prevention of future deterioration of activities of daily living. Along with other modifiable health behaviors, keeping higher protein intake could contribute to maintain elderly functional capacity." 

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