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Zinc may
reduce Pneumonia risk in nursing home
elderly
Newswise — When elderly nursing home
residents contract pneumonia, it is a blow
to their already fragile health. Simin
Nikbin Meydani, DVM, PhD of the Jean Mayer
USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on
Aging at Tufts University and colleagues
report that maintaining normal serum zinc
concentration in the blood may help reduce
the risk of pneumonia development in that
population.
“Based on our data, it appears that daily
zinc intake can help nursing home residents
who are susceptible to pneumonia, especially
those with low serum zinc concentrations in
their blood,” says Meydani, corresponding
author and director of the Nutritional
Immunology Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA .
“The study participants with normal serum
zinc concentrations in their blood reduced
their risk of developing pneumonia by about
50 percent. Additionally, deaths from all
causes were 39 percent lower in this group.”
Meydani and colleagues analyzed blood
samples from a previous study that
investigated the role of Vitamin E in
preventing respiratory infections in nursing
home residents ages 65 and older.
The study
enrolled 617 men and women from 33 nursing
homes in the Boston area. All of the
participants received daily supplements
containing 50 percent of the recommended
dietary allowance of several vitamins and
minerals, including zinc, for one year.
Foods that provide zinc include oysters, red
meat, poultry, whole grains, beans and dairy
products.
In the present study, published in the
October issue of the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition, the authors compared
blood samples collected at the beginning and
the conclusion of the one-year study.
The
participants whose serum zinc concentrations
remained low throughout that 12-month period
had more difficulty battling pneumonia. “Not
only did those participants have a higher
risk of developing pneumonia when they did
become sick, they did not recover as quickly
and required a longer course of
antibiotics,” says Meydani, who is also a
professor at the Friedman School of
Nutrition Science and Policy and the Sackler
School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, both
at Tufts University. “We also noted a higher
rate of death from all causes.”
Maintaining normal serum zinc concentration
in the blood throughout the 12-month study
period benefited the participants even if
they did develop pneumonia. Meydani adds,
“Those participants with normal serum zinc
concentrations in their blood were more
likely to spend fewer days on antibiotics
and recover more quickly.”
Meydani and colleagues conclude that zinc
may reduce the risk of pneumonia, and its
associated complications in nursing home
residents. “Zinc is already known to
strengthen the immune system; however, there
needs to be further investigation of zinc
and its effect on pneumonia development and
prevention in nursing homes,” Meydani says.
“The next step would likely be a clinical
trial.”
The study was supported by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Agricultural
Research Service and by grants from the
National Institutes of Health and, for the
preparation of the study capsules,
Hoffmann-La Roche Vitamins and Fine
Chemicals Division (currently DSM
Nutritional Products).
Meydani SM, , Barnett JB, Dallal ,GE, Fine
BC, Jacques PF, Leka LD, and Hamer, DH .
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
2007: 86: 1167-1173. “Serum zinc and
pneumonia in nursing home elderly”.
The Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School
of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts
University is the only independent school of
nutrition in the United States. The school’s
eight centers, which focus on questions
relating to famine, hunger, poverty, and
communications, are renowned for the
application of scientific research to
national and international policy. For two
decades, the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition
Research Center on Aging at Tufts University
has studied the relationship between good
nutrition and good health in aging
populations. Tufts research scientists work
with federal agencies to establish the USDA
Dietary Guidelines, the Dietary Reference
Intakes, and other significant public
policies.
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