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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
July
Isolated soy protein
shown to benefit type 2 diabetics, study indicates
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
7/30/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Isolated soy protein added to the diets of 14 men, all military veterans
under treatment for advanced stages of type 2 diabetes, significantly
lowered unwanted proteins in their urine and slightly raised desired
HDL cholesterol levels in their blood, researchers say.
The two improved areas are linked to kidney disease and coronary heart
disease, respectively, in patients with type 2 diabetes. The Centers
for Disease Control estimates that 18 million Americans have diabetes,
with more than 90 percent being type 2 cases.
The study’s findings, published in the August issue of the Journal
of Nutrition, surprisingly exceeded the expectations of participating
scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and suggest
that more widespread testing is warranted.
“The number of type 2 diabetics is increasing to epidemic proportions,
with the disease being found in younger and younger individuals everyday,”
said Sandra R. Teixeira, who had pursued the research as the focus of
her doctoral work at Illinois. “As a result, the rate also increases
tremendously for diabetic complications, which include diabetic kidney
disease and cardiovascular disease.”
The human findings confirmed those of a study published a year earlier
using mice, said Teixeira, now a researcher focusing on type 2 diabetes
for the Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Mass.
“Our most remarkable result was that soy protein added to the
diet, compared to animal source protein, in this case casein, resulted
in a significant reduction in the amount of protein in the urine,”
said John Erdman, a professor of nutrition in both the U. of I. College
of Medicine and College of Agricultural,
Consumer and Environmental Sciences. “Patients eating casein
actually had an increase of urine protein levels.”
Participants of the study were men ranging in age from 53 to 73 who
were recruited at the Veterans Affairs Illiana Health Care System (formerly
known as the Danville Veterans Administration Medical Center) in Danville,
Ill. Veterans diagnosed with diabetic nephropathy (kidney disease) took
part in the study, but over the course of three seven-month study periods
several had to be dropped because of changes in medications. Data from
the remaining 14 men were used for statistical analysis.
The men consumed pre-measured amounts, based on each man’s weight,
of either vanilla flavored isolated soy protein made from soybeans or
casein, an animal-based protein. They were supposed to have substituted
50 percent of their daily protein intake with the pre-measured powders,
but instead they consumed the powders as part of additional dishes or
drinks in their diet.
“Our hypothesis was that we could slow down or maintain the same
protein levels in the urine by introducing soy protein,” said
Lea Ann Carson, a research dietitian in the department of food
science and human nutrition at Illinois. “We actually had
a reduction.”
Those consuming the soy protein had a 9.5 percent reduction in the excretion
of urinary albumin, an undesired buildup of globular protein indicative
of worsening kidney function. Participants eating casein had an 11.1
percent increase of urinary albumin. A common treatment for diabetic
kidney disease has been a reduction in protein in the diet.
In Teixeira’s earlier study of type 2 diabetic mice, casein consumption
had increased protein levels in the urine, while soy protein only prevented
the levels from worsening.
Levels of HDL, often referred to as good cholesterol, were improved
by 4.3 percent in the human study, but overall cholesterol ratios improved
only slightly. HDL dropped just slightly in the men who consumed casein.
“The results suggest that a dietary modification as easy to implement
as consuming soy-protein-rich foods may help to prevent diabetic kidney
disease in addition to improving blood-lipid profile,” Teixeira
said. “This is quite important in light of the growing diabetic
population, and larger trials are warranted to confirm the findings.”
Why the soy protein worked as it did is not known, but Erdman theorizes
that isoflavones, estrogen-like components in soy, may play a role because
they are thought to have improved blood lipids in earlier soy studies.
Another possibility, he said, is the elevated level of serum arginine,
a chemical precursor to nitrogen oxide that dilates arteries, that was
observed in the men. Arginine may improve blood flow in the kidney,
he said.
The study, despite focusing on just 14 participants, “is probably
the strongest one done so far from the numbers of subjects and length
of time, because it involved an intervention program designed for type
2 diabetes,” said Erdman, who last year was elected to the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academies.
Co-authors of the study, in addition to Teixeira, Carson and Erdman,
were Kelly A. Tappenden, a professor of food science and human nutrition;
Mukund Prabhudesai, a professor of internal medicine in the department
of pathology in the College of Medicine; Dr. William P. Marshall, head
of the department of internal medicine in the College of Medicine and
chief of medicine service for the Veterans Affairs Illiana Health Care
System; and Richard Jones, a physician’s assistant at the VA facility.
Protein Technologies International, the Illinois Council for Agricultural
Research, a Fulbright Program fellowship to Teixeira and the Foundation
for Science and Technology in Portugal supported the research.
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