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Incorporating lean pork or legumes in the plant-forward diet pattern (one that emphasizes vegetables, fruits, whole grains, nuts, and seeds)—provided similar health advantages that help improve metabolic health and prevent age-related cognitive decline in elder people.
The findings come from new research on diet for healthy aging in older adults (aged 65+), published in Current Developments in Nutrition.(1✔ ✔Trusted Source
Effects of Minimally Processed Red Meat within a Plant-Forward Diet on Biomarkers of Physical and Cognitive Aging: A Randomized Controlled Crossover Feeding Trial
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The study shows that proteins from minimally processed red meat (lean pork) can be just as effective as protein from pulses or legumes in supporting cognitive and physical health.
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Can #red_meat be part of a plant-forward diet? #Proteins from both minimally processed #lean_pork and #legumes can support physical health in mobility and grip strength, while improving biomarkers of #heart and #brain_health in older adults. #plantforwarddiet #healthyaging #seniorhealth #dietandnutrition
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“Maintaining strength, mobility, and metabolic health is central to aging well and diet is a modifiable lever,” said Moul Dey, PhD, professor in the School of Health and Human Sciences at South Dakota State University and the study’s corresponding author.
“In this controlled feeding trial, older adults saw weight loss while preserving grip strength and chair-rise performance, and we observed favorable shifts in several metabolic and neuroactive markers linked to aging,” she adds.
Importantly, the researchers suggest that familiar foods like minimally processed lean pork can fit within a plant-forward dietary pattern while still supporting markers associated with healthy aging.
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In the study, 36 older adults completed both diet phases. Researchers tracked metabolic markers, body composition, and functional measures of strength and mobility. They also explored blood biomarkers related to nutrition and neurotransmitter pathways.
Across both plant-forward dietary patterns, the study found:
The study did not add an exercise training program as part of the intervention, offering insight into the potential of diet quality and protein patterns alone to support healthy-aging markers in a real-world, older-adult population.
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Aging is often discussed in terms of big outcomes, heart disease, diabetes, and cognitive decline, but day-to-day quality of life is also driven by maintainable inputs: food routines, protein choices, and diet quality.
This research adds controlled-feeding evidence to a growing body of work suggesting that plant-forward eating patterns can be flexible and that minimally processed animal proteins, like pork, can have a place alongside plant proteins, depending on preferences and cultural eating habits.
“This is the kind of dietary direction and evidence people are looking for in January; actionable, realistic, and grounded in whole foods,” said Kristen Hicks-Roof PhD, RDN, LDN, FAND, FNAP, Director of Human Nutrition at the National Pork Board.
“Healthy aging isn’t just about living longer, it’s about staying strong, independent, and sharp. This study shows that a plant-forward plate can include minimally processed pork as a high-quality protein option, while still supporting meaningful markers of health in older adults.”
Reference:
Source-Eurekalert
Written by: RSS
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