Statuses of Vitamins D and A require special attention
From: University of Helsinki
January 21, 2021 --- Researchers report
a comprehensive pilot study on the metabolic effects of full vegan diet on
young children. The study found vegan children to have remarkably altered
metabolism and lower vitamin A and D status compared to children with no
special diet.
The study concludes that vegan diet has
a broad effect on children's metabolism. Serum biomarker levels for vitamins A
and D, cholesterol forms and essential amino acids were significantly lower in
children on vegan diet compared to age-adjusted omnivores. In addition,
docosahexaenoic acid is absent from vegan diet. The results were recently
published in a high-profile international scientific journal EMBO
Molecular Medicine.
Vegan diets gain popularity especially
among young adults, and through choices of the families vegan diet is becoming
more common in young children, too. The motives behind choosing a vegan
lifestyle are ecological, ethical and health-related: vegan diets exclude all
animal-based products. It is recommended that full vegan diet is always
supplemented with vitamin B12, vitamin D and iodine, and based on individual
assessment the supplementation for calcium, vitamin B2, iron and zinc may be
needed.
Except for vitamin D, the study did not
find differences between diet groups in the levels of these nutrients in young
children. All of the participated vegan children used regular vitamin B12, and
all but one used regular vitamin D and iodine supplementation, indicating that
Finnish vegan families are well familiar with the previously known nutritional
requirements of vegan diets. However, current nutritional recommendations are
based on studies conducted on adult vegans, and previous studies on metabolic
effects of vegan diets in children do not exist.
In their recently published article Topi
Hovinen, MD, and Liisa Korkalo, PhD, together with the multidisciplinary team
led by academy professor Anu Suomalainen-Wartiovaara and docent Maijaliisa
Erkkola studied comprehensively the nutrition and metabolism of 40 healthy
children in daycares of Helsinki. The children were following a vegan,
vegetarian or omnivore diet according to the choice of their families. Their
nutritional intake, metabolic biomarkers and micronutrient statuses were
extensively studied.
The children on a fully vegan diet were
found to have significantly lower vitamin D levels compared to children without
a special diet despite having regular vitamin D supplementation and blood
samples being collected in late summer. Surprisingly, also their vitamin A
status was lowered. Levels for LDL and HDL cholesterol, essential amino acid
and docosahexaenoic acid, a fatty acid with a central role in development of
visual function, were low while folate levels were remarkably high in vegan
children.
According to the researchers, the new
findings motivate further and larger studies on the health consequences of a
vegan diet in young children.
"Our results indicate that the
health effects of strict diets on children cannot be extrapolated from studies
on adults. In addition to vitamin D intake, attention must be paid to adequate
intake of vitamin A and protein from various sources." says Topi Hovinen.
"The vegan families were active to
participate in our study. This is important, because without such voluntary
contribution of the families it is not possible to undertake this kind of
studies," emphasizes Liisa Korkalo.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/01/210121132300.htm
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