12,344 research outputs found
Intakes, adequacy, food sources and biomarker status of iron, folate, and vitamin Bāā in MÄori and non-MÄori octogenarians : life and living in advanced age : a cohort study in New Zealand (LiLACS NZ) : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Science in Nutrition and Dietetics, Massey University, Albany, New Zealand
Background: Iron, folate and vitamin B12 are the three key nutrients associated with the
development of anaemia and have also been associated with the dietary patterns linked to higher
malnutrition risk in older adults. Octogenarians may be at increased risk for iron, folate and vitamin
B12 deficiency due to reduced food intake. Dietary factors, cooking methods, medications, presence
of inflammation, and impaired gastrointestinal absorption may affect the availability and
bioavailability of these nutrients. There are currently no specific nutrient reference values (NRVs)
or biomarker cut-offs for adults in advanced age and little is known about the relationship between
dietary intake and biomarkers for older adults.
Aim: To investigate the intake, adequacy, food sources and biomarker status of iron, folate and
vitamin B12 and the relationship between dietary intake and biomarkers.
Methods: In the follow up assessment of LiLACS NZ, 216 MÄori and 362 non-MÄori participants
completed a detailed dietary assessment using 2x 24-hr multiple pass recalls. Adequacy of iron,
folate and vitamin B12 were determined by comparison to the Estimated Average Requirement
(EAR) for adults aged 71+ years. Serum ferritin, serum iron, total iron binding capacity, transferrin
saturation, red blood cell (RBC) folate, serum folate, serum vitamin B12 and haemoglobin were
compared to recognised cut-offs for adults. Generalised linear models and binary regression
estimated the association between dietary intake and biomarkers.
Results: Most participants had adequate dietary iron intakes (88% MÄori; 95% non-MÄori above
EAR) and biomarkers for iron (>94% above cut-offs). The EAR for vitamin B12 was met by 74% MÄori;
78% non-MÄori and folate met by 42% MÄori; 49% non-MÄori. MÄori versus non-MÄori had higher
intakes of vitamin B12 (p=0.038) and serum vitamin B12 (p=0.026). Increased dietary folate intake
was associated with increased RBC folate for MÄori (p=0.001) and non-MÄori (p=0.014) and with
increased serum folate for MÄori (p215Ī¼g/day was associated with reduced
risk of deficiency in RBC folate for MÄori (p=0.001).
Conclusions: Dietary intake and stores of iron are largely adequate in this population. Strategies to
optimise the intake and bioavailability of foods rich in folate and vitamin B12 may be beneficial
Stable embeddedness and NIP
We give sufficient conditions for a predicate P in a complete theory T to be
stably embedded: P with its induced 0-definable structure has "finite rank", P
has NIP in T and P is 1-stably embedded. This generalizes recent work by Hasson
and Onshuus in the case where P is o-minimal in T.Comment: 10 page
On the Generic Type of the Free Group
We answer a question raised by Pillay, that is whether the infinite weight of
the generic type of the free group is witnessed in . We also prove
that the set of primitive elements in finite rank free groups is not uniformly
definable. As a corollary, we observe that the generic type over the empty set
is not isolated. Finally, we show that uncountable free groups are not
-homogeneous.Comment: To appear in J. of Symbolic Logi
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