Diet and chronic degenerative diseases: perspectives from China
Open Access
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 59 (5) , 1153S-1161S
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/59.5.1153s
Abstract
A comprehensive ecologic survey of dietary, lifestyle, and mortality characteristics of 65 counties in rural China showed that diets are substantially richer in foods of plant origin when compared with diets consumed in the more industrialized, Western societies. Mean intakes of animal protein (about one-tenth of the mean intake in the United States as energy percent), total fat (14.5% of energy), and dietary fiber (33.3 g/d) reflected a substantial preference for foods of plant origin. Mean plasma cholesterol concentration, at ≈3.23–3.49 mmol/L, corresponds to this dietary lifestyle. The principal hypothesis under investigation in this paper is that chronic degenerative diseases are prevented by an aggregate effect of nutrients and nutrient-intake amounts that are commonly supplied by foods of plant origin. The breadth and consistency of evidence for this hypothesis was investigated with multiple intake-biomarker-disease associations, which were appropriately adjusted. There appears to be no threshold of plant-food enrichment or minimization of fat intake beyond which further disease prevention does not occur. These findings suggest that even small intakes of foods of animal origin are associated with significant increases in plasma cholesterol concentrations, which are associated, in turn, with significant increases in chronic degenerative disease mortality rates.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inhibition of aflatoxin B1-induced gamma-glutamyltranspeptidase positive (GGT+) hepatic preneoplastic foci and tumors by low protein diets: evidence that altered GGT+ foci indicate neoplastic potentialCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1992
- Iron DeficiencyScientific American, 1991
- Nutritional Consequences of VegetarianismAnnual Review of Nutrition, 1991
- Cancer Incidence and Cancer Mortality in Relation to Serum CholesterolJNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1989
- Total and high density lipoprotein cholesterol in the serum and risk of mortality: evidence of a threshold effect.BMJ, 1985
- The effects of organic acids, phytates and polyphenols on the absorption of iron from vegetablesBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1983
- SERUM CHOLESTEROL-THE KNAVE OF HEARTS AND THE JOKERThe Lancet, 1981
- REGULATION OF ENERGY BALANCEAnnual Review of Nutrition, 1981
- The relationship between serum urea levels and dietary nitrogen utilization in young menBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1974
- The electroencephalogram in veganism, vegetarianism, vitamin B12 deficiency, and in controls.Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry, 1966