Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans: a cross-sectional study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans : a cross-sectional study. / Aaslyng, Margit D.; Dam, Astrid Bøgebjerg; Petersen, Iben Lykke; Christoffersen, Tenna.

In: BMC Nutrition, Vol. 9, 131, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Aaslyng, MD, Dam, AB, Petersen, IL & Christoffersen, T 2023, 'Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans: a cross-sectional study', BMC Nutrition, vol. 9, 131. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y

APA

Aaslyng, M. D., Dam, A. B., Petersen, I. L., & Christoffersen, T. (2023). Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans: a cross-sectional study. BMC Nutrition, 9, [131]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y

Vancouver

Aaslyng MD, Dam AB, Petersen IL, Christoffersen T. Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans: a cross-sectional study. BMC Nutrition. 2023;9. 131. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y

Author

Aaslyng, Margit D. ; Dam, Astrid Bøgebjerg ; Petersen, Iben Lykke ; Christoffersen, Tenna. / Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans : a cross-sectional study. In: BMC Nutrition. 2023 ; Vol. 9.

Bibtex

@article{0e29688c36ef4c479f56b22dda4e596a,
title = "Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans: a cross-sectional study",
abstract = "Background: A growing proportion of the population are replacing their dietary animal protein with plant protein. A particular example of this trend is the vegan diet, which excludes all food items of animal origin. However, the DIAAS score for individual plant proteins is generally lower than that of animal proteins due to an unbalanced amino acid composition and lower bioavailability. Care must therefore be taken to meet the nutritional recommendations in the daily food intake. Methods: A three-day dietary food record was carried out by 40 Danish vegans in a cross-sectional study. The data were analysed, with particular emphasis on protein requirements and the essential amino acid composition of the diet. Results: The protein recommendations were met on all three days by 60% of the participants. In contrast, 18% did not meet the protein recommendations on any of the three days and 7% met the recommendations on only one of the days. Lysine was the most limiting amino acid (only 50% met the recommendations every day) followed by the sulphur-containing amino acids (recommendations met by 67.5%), leucine and valine (recommendations met by 70%). Combining both the amount of protein and the intake of the essential amino acids showed that less than half of the participants met the recommendations on all three days (47.5%) and 35% did not meet the recommendations on any days or on one day only. Conclusion: In conclusion, our study showed that many of the participants in the present study failed to meet the daily protein intake requirements, both on single days and on all three days. Furthermore, the food intake was found to have an inadequate amino acid composition and was particularly limited by the essential amino acids lysine, the sulphur-containing amino acids, and leucine and valine. This could be ascribed to the fact that only a limited number of protein sources were consumed during a day.",
keywords = "Nutrition, Plant-based diet, Protein quality, Three-day dietary records, Vegan",
author = "Aaslyng, {Margit D.} and Dam, {Astrid B{\o}gebjerg} and Petersen, {Iben Lykke} and Tenna Christoffersen",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "B M C Nutrition",
issn = "2055-0928",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Protein content and amino acid composition in the diet of Danish vegans

T2 - a cross-sectional study

AU - Aaslyng, Margit D.

AU - Dam, Astrid Bøgebjerg

AU - Petersen, Iben Lykke

AU - Christoffersen, Tenna

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Background: A growing proportion of the population are replacing their dietary animal protein with plant protein. A particular example of this trend is the vegan diet, which excludes all food items of animal origin. However, the DIAAS score for individual plant proteins is generally lower than that of animal proteins due to an unbalanced amino acid composition and lower bioavailability. Care must therefore be taken to meet the nutritional recommendations in the daily food intake. Methods: A three-day dietary food record was carried out by 40 Danish vegans in a cross-sectional study. The data were analysed, with particular emphasis on protein requirements and the essential amino acid composition of the diet. Results: The protein recommendations were met on all three days by 60% of the participants. In contrast, 18% did not meet the protein recommendations on any of the three days and 7% met the recommendations on only one of the days. Lysine was the most limiting amino acid (only 50% met the recommendations every day) followed by the sulphur-containing amino acids (recommendations met by 67.5%), leucine and valine (recommendations met by 70%). Combining both the amount of protein and the intake of the essential amino acids showed that less than half of the participants met the recommendations on all three days (47.5%) and 35% did not meet the recommendations on any days or on one day only. Conclusion: In conclusion, our study showed that many of the participants in the present study failed to meet the daily protein intake requirements, both on single days and on all three days. Furthermore, the food intake was found to have an inadequate amino acid composition and was particularly limited by the essential amino acids lysine, the sulphur-containing amino acids, and leucine and valine. This could be ascribed to the fact that only a limited number of protein sources were consumed during a day.

AB - Background: A growing proportion of the population are replacing their dietary animal protein with plant protein. A particular example of this trend is the vegan diet, which excludes all food items of animal origin. However, the DIAAS score for individual plant proteins is generally lower than that of animal proteins due to an unbalanced amino acid composition and lower bioavailability. Care must therefore be taken to meet the nutritional recommendations in the daily food intake. Methods: A three-day dietary food record was carried out by 40 Danish vegans in a cross-sectional study. The data were analysed, with particular emphasis on protein requirements and the essential amino acid composition of the diet. Results: The protein recommendations were met on all three days by 60% of the participants. In contrast, 18% did not meet the protein recommendations on any of the three days and 7% met the recommendations on only one of the days. Lysine was the most limiting amino acid (only 50% met the recommendations every day) followed by the sulphur-containing amino acids (recommendations met by 67.5%), leucine and valine (recommendations met by 70%). Combining both the amount of protein and the intake of the essential amino acids showed that less than half of the participants met the recommendations on all three days (47.5%) and 35% did not meet the recommendations on any days or on one day only. Conclusion: In conclusion, our study showed that many of the participants in the present study failed to meet the daily protein intake requirements, both on single days and on all three days. Furthermore, the food intake was found to have an inadequate amino acid composition and was particularly limited by the essential amino acids lysine, the sulphur-containing amino acids, and leucine and valine. This could be ascribed to the fact that only a limited number of protein sources were consumed during a day.

KW - Nutrition

KW - Plant-based diet

KW - Protein quality

KW - Three-day dietary records

KW - Vegan

U2 - 10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y

DO - 10.1186/s40795-023-00793-y

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37968717

AN - SCOPUS:85176579734

VL - 9

JO - B M C Nutrition

JF - B M C Nutrition

SN - 2055-0928

M1 - 131

ER -

ID: 374969735