Nutrient-Optimized Beef Enhances Blood Levels of Vitamin D and Selenium among Young Women

A. Haug, C. Vermeer, L. Ruud, M. Monfort-Pires, V. Grabez, B. Egelandsdal*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Bovine meat provides healthy nutrients but has also been negatively linked to greenhouse gases and non-communicable diseases. A double-blind intervention study was carried out to compare beef meat from bulls fed with feed supplemented with selenium, vitamin D, E, K (SeDEK-feed), and n-3, or REGULAR feed. Thirty-four young healthy women (19-29 years old) consumed 300 g of these beef types per day for 6 days in a cross-over design. Diet registrations, blood samples, anthropometric measurements, and clinical data were collected four times. Both beef diets were higher than their habitual diet in protein, fat, saturated fat, and several micronutrients; contained more vegetables and fewer carbohydrates and were followed by a higher feeling of satiety. The SeDEK beef had higher amounts of selenium, vitamin 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25(OH)D3), E, and K (MK4), and increased serum selenium and 25(OH)D3 from the participants' normal values if they were below 85 mu g/L of selenium and 30 nmol of 25(OH)D3/L, respectively. Our study showed that optimized beef increased serum selenium in young women having moderate selenium levels and improved blood 25(OH)D3 in a woman having low to normal 25(OH)D3. Meat should be optimized to increase specific consumer groups' needs for selenium and vitamin D.
Original languageEnglish
Article number631
Number of pages21
JournalFoods
Volume11
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2022

Keywords

  • beef meat
  • human intervention
  • young women
  • vitamin D
  • selenium
  • NONHEME IRON-ABSORPTION
  • MEAT CONSUMPTION
  • D DEFICIENCY
  • DIET
  • FOOD
  • PHYLLOQUINONE
  • AGE
  • CHILDREN
  • QUALITY
  • ANEMIA

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