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Replacing Animal-Based Proteins with Plant-Based Proteins Changes the Composition of a Whole Nordic Diet—A Randomised Clinical Trial in Healthy Finnish Adults

Authors :
Essi Päivärinta
Anne-Maria Pajari
Mikko Lehtovirta
Tiina Pellinen
Maijaliisa Erkkola
Suvi T. Itkonen
Department of Food and Nutrition
Viikki Molecular Nutrition Group
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
Teachers' Academy
Maijaliisa Erkkola / Principal Investigator
Nutrition Science
Anne-Maria Pajari / Principal Investigator
Family nutrition and wellbeing
Source :
Nutrients, Vol 12, Iss 943, p 943 (2020), Nutrients, Volume 12, Issue 4
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Increased consumption of plant-based foods and decreased consumption of animal-based foods is recommended for healthy diets and sustainable food production. We investigated the effects of partial replacement of dietary animal proteins with plant-based ones on intake of energy-yielding nutrients, fibre, and plasma lipoproteins. This 12-week randomised clinical intervention comprised 107 women and 29 men (20&ndash<br />69 years) in three diet groups with different dietary protein compositions (&ldquo<br />ANIMAL&rdquo<br />Animal 70%/plant 30%<br />&ldquo<br />50/50&rdquo<br />Animal 50%/plant 50%<br />PLANT&rdquo<br />Animal 30%/plant 70%<br />all: Protein intake 17 E%). Nutrient intakes were assessed by 4-day food records. Saturated fat intake (E%) was lower and polyunsaturated fatty acid intake (E%) higher in the PLANT and 50/50 groups compared to the ANIMAL group (p &lt<br />0.001 for all). Fibre intake was higher in the PLANT (p ˂ 0.001) and 50/50 (p = 0.012) groups. Total and LDL cholesterol were lower in the PLANT than in the ANIMAL group (p = 0.003 for both) but no differences in HDL cholesterol or triglycerides were observed (p &gt<br />0.05). Replacing animal protein with plant protein sources in the diet led to an increased fibre intake and improved dietary fat quality as well as blood lipoprotein profile. Flexitarian diets could provide healthy and more sustainable alternatives for the current, predominantly animal-based diets.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726643
Volume :
12
Issue :
943
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nutrients
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f1248cd6da75f82ed138730875abd327