Abstract

The 2015 US dietary guidelines advise the importance of good dietary patterns for health, which includes all nutrients. Micronutrients are rarely, if ever, consumed separately, they are not tissue specific in their actions and at the molecular level they are multitaskers. Metabolism functions within a seemingly random cellular milieu however ratios are important, for example, the ratio of adenosine triphosphate to adenosine monophosphate, or oxidized to reduced glutathione. Health status is determined by simple ratios, such as the waist hip ratio, or ratio of fat mass to lean mass. Some nutrient ratios exist and remain controversial such as the omega-6/omega-3 fatty acid ratio and the sodium/potassium ratio. Therefore, examining ratios of micronutrients may convey more information about how diet and health outcomes are related. Summarized micronutrient intake data, from food only, from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, were used to generate initial ratios. Overall, in this preliminary analysis dietary ratios of micronutrients showed some differences between intakes and recommendations. Principles outlined here could be used in nutritional epidemiology and in basic nutritional research, rather than focusing on individual nutrient intakes. This paper presents the concept of micronutrient ratios to encourage change in the way nutrients are regarded.

Highlights

  • The basic science is not physics or mathematics but biology—the study of life

  • Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI) and Daily Values (DVs; a value set by the Food and Drug Administration for food labelling purposes) were converted to the milligram

  • The total mineral intake inherent in the DRIs are similar for males and females except for adjustments to Ca, Mg and Zn

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Summary

Introduction

The basic science is not physics or mathematics but biology—the study of life. We must learn to think both logically and bio-logically.—Edward Abbey [1]The foundation of nutritional science is rooted in singling out specific foods, nutrients or other compounds, such as phytochemicals; historically protein was once considered the only nutrient (we recommend reading A Short History of Nutritional Science: Part 1 [2], 2 [3], 3 [4] and 4 [5]).This very early search for foods/nutrients that would cure diseases (predominately acute conditions) remains the principle of nutritional science today, in the setting of our modern sedentary lifestyle and even in the face of global obesity, diabetes and other chronic disease. Current nutritional issues are very different from sailors receiving fresh fruit and vegetables to alleviate scurvy caused by vitamin C deficiency; the current nutritional issues have a complex etiology and this is our focus It is Nutrients 2018, 10, 107; doi:10.3390/nu10010107 www.mdpi.com/journal/nutrients. The concept of small effects from diet over time is present in the 2015 DG, showing that it takes time for dietary/lifestyle changes to produce beneficial effects, which may be more appropriate for real life situations. This is not a sudden change since the first dietary guidelines in 1980; there has been a slow shift towards dietary patterns and away from single nutrients [8]. Some food patterns have a higher inherent concentration of beneficial nutrients [9], as well as a potentially better plant to animal energy subsistence ratio, compared to modern diets [10]

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