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Heaney RP, Dowell MS, Rafferty K, Bierman J. 2000.
Bioavailability of the calcium in fortified soy imitation milk, with some observations on method.
Am J Clin Nutr 71:1166-1169.
Recommended intakes of both vitamin C and vitamin E were increased, with a recommendation to smokers to consume more vitamin C than non-smokers. Women should consume 75 mg of vitamin C daily; men should consume 90 mg; smokers should consume an additional 35 mg. Food sources of vitamin C include citrus fruit, potatoes, strawberries, broccoli, and green leafy vegetables. Both men and women should consume 15 milligrams of vitamin E daily from food sources such as vegetable oils, nuts, seeds, and green leafy vegetables. The selenium level in plant food depends on the selenium level in the soil in which the food was grown. Cereals and grains are a good source of selenium for vegetarians. The RDA for selenium is 55 mcg for men and women.
Recommended intake levels can be easily attained through foods, so supplements of these nutrients do not appear to be necessary. This report did not recommend a specific daily intake level for carotenoids. Upper intake levels were set for vitamins C and E and selenium. This level is the maximum intake of a nutrient likely to pose no risk of adverse health effects in most people.
Food and Nutrition Board, Institute of Medicine. 2000.
Dietary Reference Intakes for Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Selenium, and Carotenoids.
Washington, DC: National Academy Press, national-academies.org.
The researchers who conducted this study hypothesized that vegetarians ate more soy foods and thus were exposed to more phytoestrogens and that this led to their increased risk of having a son with hypospadias. There is little basis for this conclusion since there was no significant association between use of soymilk and other soy products and development of hypospadias. The researchers plan to measure levels of nutrients, phytoestrogens, and pesticides in blood from women who participated in this study to try to determine specific factors which could have increased a woman's risk of having a child with hypospadias. At this point, it seems premature to link increased risk of hypospadias to a vegetarian diet in pregnancy.
North K, Golding J, The ALSPAC Study Team. 2000.
A maternal vegetarian diet in pregnancy is associated with hypospadias.
BJU International 85:107-111.
Researchers studied men and women who had a history of polyps. Half followed a high-fiber, lowfat, high fruit and vegetable diet, and half followed their usual diet for four years. There was no difference in the number of new polyps between the two groups, which suggests that diet did not affect polyp development. Similar findings were seen in another study which used a dietary supplement of wheat-bran fiber instead of the subjects' usual diets.
The dietary changes may not have been effective in preventing polyp recurrence because they were too short-term to make a difference. Additionally, factors early in the participants' lives may have predisposed them to develop colorectal polyps; intervention was not able to overcome these earlier influences. Researchers also noted that the new polyps tended to be small; perhaps dietary factors prevent small polyps from growing into larger polyps or developing into cancer.
Do these results mean that it's fine to eat a typical American low-fiber diet? Absolutely not. Much evidence suggests that a lowfat, high fruit and vegetable, high-fiber diet can reduce the risk of many chronic diseases including heart disease, hypertension, obesity, and diabetes.
Schatzkin A, Lanza E, Corle D, et al. 2000.
Lack of effect of a low-fat, high-fiber diet on the recurrence of colorectal adenomas.
N Engl J Med 42:1149-1155.
Alberts DS, Martinez ME, Roe DJ, et al. 2000.
Lack of effect of a high-fiber cereal supplement on the recurrence of colorectal adenomas.
N Engl J Med 342: 1156-1162.
Byers T. 2000.
Diet, colorectal adenomas, and colorectal cancer.
N Engl J Med 342:1206-1207.
At this point, dietary changes should not be made as a result of the one study showing brain changes associated with tofu consumption. There may be other factors in these subjects or their diets that could have influenced the results. Hopefully, additional research will clarify many of these issues.
1. White LR, Petrovitch H, Ross GW, et al. 2000.
Brain aging and midlife tofu consumption.
J Am Coll Nutr 19: 242-255.
2. Rice MM, Graves AB, McCurry SM, et al. 2000.
Tofu consumption and cognition in older Japanese American men and women.
J Nutr 130 (suppl 3): 676S.
Excerpts from the Sept/Oct 2000 Issue
The Vegetarian Journal published here is not the complete issue, but these are excerpts from the published magazine. Anyone wanting to see everything should subscribe to the magazine.
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| Last Updated August 14, 2000 |
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