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The proportion of the elderly population has increased rapidly worldwide. Frailty is a common geriatric syndrome. Comprehensive dietary management strategy may have beneficial effects on frailty prevention and reversal. We compared the effects between micronutrients and/or protein supplement, and balanced diet on frailty status in elderly individuals who were at either pre-frail or frail stage. A total of 37 subjects completed a 3-month paralleled, single-blind, randomized control trial on (1) multiple nutrients supplementations, (2) multiple nutrients plus isolated soy protein supplementation, and (3) individualized nutrition education with designed dishware for balanced diet as well as food supplementations (mixed nuts and milk powder). Intervention effects on dietary intakes, biomarkers, frailty score and geriatric depression score (GDS) were assessed. The nutrition education intervention with designed dishware and milk powder/nuts supplement significantly increased the intake of vegetables, dairy, and nuts, along with increased concentration of urinary urea nitrogen of the pre-frail/frail elders. It yielded a significant reduction in frailty score (p<0.05) and a borderline decrease (p=0.063) in GDS-SF. Our study indicated that the dietary approach with easy-to-comprehend dishware and food supplements to optimize the distribution of multiple dietary components showed its potential to improve not only frail status but also psychological condition in elderly.
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Modified Fried's Frailty phenotypes:
unintentional weight loss > 5% or 3 kg in previous year
Exhaustion: defined as positive answer to the question "I had felt fatigue or exhaustion for >3 days in the previous week"
Weakness: hand grip strength is below the gender and BMI specific thresholds. The cutoff points are set as follows:
Men: For BMI ≤ 22.1, < 25.0 kg; for BMI 22.1-24.3, < 26.5 kg; for BMI 24.4-26.3, < 26.4 kg; for BMI ≥ 26.3, < 27.2 kg Women: for BMI ≤ 22.3, <14.6 kg; for BMI 22.3-24.2, <16.1 kg; for BMI 24.3-26.8, <16.5 kg; for BMI ≥ 26.8, < 16.4 kg
Slowness: gait speed is slower than the gender and height specific thresholds. The cutoff points are set as follows:
Men: for height ≤ 163 cm, >14.92 sec/10m; for > 163 cm, >=14.08 sec/10m Women: for height ≤ 152 cm, >17.54 sec/10m; for > 152 cm, >=14.92 sec/10m
Low Physical Activity: No exercise and no labor or leisure-time physical activity in the past year, or below the calorie consumption: men <594kcal/week and women <295kcal/week.
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40 participants in 4 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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