AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates whether regular consumption of soy products helps prevent a decline in daily living activities in older Japanese women, specifically those 75 years and older, due to age-related estrogen loss.
  • - Researchers analyzed data from 1289 women over four years, focusing on the link between how often they consumed soy and their ability to perform basic and instrumental daily living activities.
  • - Results indicated that women who consumed soy products more frequently were significantly less likely to experience declines in their daily living activities, suggesting that regular soy intake may benefit this demographic's functional health.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Since soy isoflavones compensate for age-related estrogen reduction, adequate intake of soy products may prevent the decline in activities of daily living (ADL) due to estrogen reduction in women. However, it is unclear whether regular soy product intake prevents ADL decline. This study examined the effects of soy product consumption on basic/instrumental ADL (BADL/IADL) in Japanese women 75 years or older for 4 years.

Materials And Methods: The subject population consisted of 1289 women aged 75 years or older living in Tokyo who underwent private health examinations in 2008. For 1114 (or 1042) participants without baseline BADL (or IADL) disability, we examined the association between baseline soy product consumption frequency and the BADL (or IADL) disabilities 4 years later using logistic regression analyses. The models were adjusted for baseline age, or further for dietary variety for food groups other than soy products, exercise and sport participation, smoking, pre-existing disease number, and body mass index.

Results: Regardless of adjustment for potential confounding factors, less frequent soy product consumption was associated with higher BADL or IADL disability incidence. In the fully adjusted models, the trend toward a higher incidence of disabilities with less frequent soy product consumption was statistically significant for both BADL ( = 0.001) and IADL ( = 0.007).

Conclusions: Those who consumed soy products more frequently at baseline were less likely to develop BADL and IADL disabilities after 4 years than those who did not. The results show that daily soy product consumption may prevent functional ADL decline in older Japanese women.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240334PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/whr.2022.0076DOI Listing

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