Stamler Jeremiah, Brown Ian J, Daviglus Martha L, Chan Queenie, Kesteloot Hugo, Ueshima Hirotsugu, Zhao Liancheng, Elliott Paul
Department of Preventive Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Circulation. 2009 Jul 21;120(3):221-8. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.839241. Epub 2009 Jul 6.
Data are available that indicate an independent inverse relationship of dietary vegetable protein to the blood pressure (BP) of individuals. Here, we assess whether BP is associated with glutamic acid intake (the predominant dietary amino acid, especially in vegetable protein) and with each of 4 other amino acids that are relatively higher in vegetable than animal protein (proline, phenylalanine, serine, and cystine).
This was a cross-sectional epidemiological study with 4680 persons 40 to 59 years of age from 17 random population samples in China, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States. BP was measured 8 times at 4 visits; dietary data (83 nutrients, 18 amino acids) were obtained from 4 standardized, multipass, 24-hour dietary recalls and 2 timed 24-hour urine collections. Dietary glutamic acid (percentage of total protein intake) was inversely related to BP. Across multivariate regression models (model 1, which controlled for age, gender, and sample, through model 5, which controlled for 16 possible nonnutrient and nutrient confounders), estimated average BP differences associated with a glutamic acid intake that was higher by 4.72% of total dietary protein (2 SD) were -1.5 to -3.0 mm Hg systolic and -1.0 to -1.6 mm Hg diastolic (z scores -2.15 to -5.11). Results were similar for the glutamic acid-BP relationship with each of the other amino acids also in the model; eg, with control for 15 variables plus proline, systolic/diastolic pressure differences were -2.7/-2.0 mm Hg (z scores -2.51, -2.82). In these 2-amino acid models, higher intake (by 2 SD) of each of the other amino acids was associated with small BP differences and z scores.
Dietary glutamic acid may have independent BP-lowering effects, which may contribute to the inverse relation of vegetable protein to BP.
现有数据表明膳食植物蛋白与个体血压(BP)之间存在独立的负相关关系。在此,我们评估血压是否与谷氨酸摄入量(膳食中主要的氨基酸,尤其是植物蛋白中的)以及植物蛋白中相对高于动物蛋白的其他4种氨基酸(脯氨酸、苯丙氨酸、丝氨酸和胱氨酸)中的每一种有关。
这是一项横断面流行病学研究,研究对象为来自中国、日本、英国和美国17个随机人群样本的4680名40至59岁的人。在4次就诊时测量8次血压;膳食数据(83种营养素、18种氨基酸)通过4次标准化、多步骤、24小时膳食回顾和2次定时24小时尿液收集获得。膳食谷氨酸(占总蛋白质摄入量的百分比)与血压呈负相关。在多变量回归模型中(模型1控制年龄、性别和样本,模型5控制16种可能的非营养素和营养素混杂因素),与总膳食蛋白质摄入量高4.72%(2个标准差)的谷氨酸摄入量相关的估计平均血压差异为收缩压-1.5至-3.0 mmHg,舒张压-1.0至-1.6 mmHg(z分数-2.15至-5.11)。模型中谷氨酸与血压的关系以及其他每种氨基酸的结果相似;例如,在控制15个变量加脯氨酸的情况下,收缩压/舒张压差异为-2.7/-2.0 mmHg(z分数-2.51,-2.82)。在这些双氨基酸模型中,其他每种氨基酸摄入量较高(2个标准差)与较小的血压差异和z分数相关。
膳食谷氨酸可能具有独立的降压作用,这可能有助于解释植物蛋白与血压之间的负相关关系。