Department of Nutrition Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States.
Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture, Texas A&M University System, College Station, TX, United States.
J Nutr. 2024 Nov;154(11):3475-3484. doi: 10.1016/j.tjnut.2024.09.019. Epub 2024 Sep 21.
Adolescents have the poorest dietary intake throughout their lifespan. Food insecurity worsens these nutritional risks. Eggs are a nutrient-dense strategy to increase nutrient quality.
Dietary data of United States adolescents in the 2007-2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were analyzed (14-17 y; n = 3633). Egg-rich diet levels were categorized as 1) no eggs, 2) eggs as ingredients in dishes, or 3) primarily egg dishes. Food security status was classified using the United States Household Food Security Survey Module. The National Cancer Institute method was used to estimate usual nutrient intake and nutrient exposure scores [i.e., Food Nutrient Index (FNI) and Total Nutrient Index (TNI)]. Nutrient amounts from 1 medium egg were modeled on existing intakes. Pairwise t-tests determined significant differences.
Over 60% of adolescents risked inadequate intake of calcium, choline, magnesium, vitamin D, and vitamin E regardless of food security status. Food-secure adolescents consuming primarily egg dishes had higher mean usual intakes of lutein + zeaxanthin (1544.1 μg), choline (408.4 mg), vitamin B2 (2.3 mg), selenium (128.6 μg), vitamin D (6 μg), docosahexaenoic acid (70 mg), and protein (89.1 g) than other groups (P < 0.0002). Those who were food secure and consuming eggs as ingredients in dishes demonstrated higher nutrient adequacy for magnesium (scored ∼66 out of 100), potassium (scored 81), and total scores (scored 72 and 69, respectively) for the TNI and FNI; and folate only (scored 92) for the TNI, than those who were food insecure and not consuming eggs (P < 0.0002). Adding 1 egg increased choline and vitamin D usual intakes for some groups and nutrient index scores for all groups (P < 0.0005).
Adolescents are at substantial nutritional risk that was exacerbated by food insecurity and less egg consumption.
青少年在其整个生命周期中的饮食摄入最差。粮食不安全状况使这些营养风险恶化。鸡蛋是增加营养质量的营养密集型策略。
1)比较通常的营养素摄入量、膳食参考摄入量和蛋白质与推荐摄入量和微量营养素质量评分的符合程度;2)通过粮食安全状况和富含鸡蛋的饮食来分析添加 1 个鸡蛋如何影响青少年的营养状况。
分析了 2007-2018 年美国国家健康与营养调查中青少年的数据(14-17 岁;n=3633)。富含鸡蛋的饮食水平分为 1)无鸡蛋,2)鸡蛋作为菜肴的成分,或 3)主要是鸡蛋菜肴。使用美国家庭粮食安全调查模块对粮食安全状况进行分类。使用国家癌症研究所的方法来估计通常的营养素摄入量和营养素暴露评分[即食物营养指数(FNI)和总营养素指数(TNI)]。根据现有摄入量对 1 个中等大小鸡蛋的营养素含量进行建模。通过两两 t 检验确定显著差异。
超过 60%的青少年无论粮食安全状况如何,都有钙、胆碱、镁、维生素 D 和维生素 E 摄入不足的风险。主要食用鸡蛋菜肴的粮食安全青少年的平均日常摄入量较高,叶黄素+玉米黄质(1544.1μg)、胆碱(408.4mg)、维生素 B2(2.3mg)、硒(128.6μg)、维生素 D(6μg)、二十二碳六烯酸(70mg)和蛋白质(89.1g)比其他组(P<0.0002)。那些粮食安全且食用鸡蛋作为菜肴成分的人,其镁(评分为 100 分中的 66 分)、钾(评分为 81 分)和 TNI 和 FNI 的总得分(分别为 72 分和 69 分),以及 TNI 中的叶酸(评分为 92 分)得分较高,而那些粮食不安全且不食用鸡蛋的人得分较低(P<0.0002)。添加 1 个鸡蛋增加了一些组的胆碱和维生素 D 的日常摄入量以及所有组的营养素指数得分(P<0.0005)。
青少年面临严重的营养风险,粮食不安全状况和较少的鸡蛋摄入使风险加剧。