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      The diet-body offset in human nitrogen isotopic values: A controlled dietary study

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          Abstract

          The "trophic level enrichment" between diet and body results in an overall increase in nitrogen isotopic values as the food chain is ascended. Quantifying the diet–body Δ 15N spacing has proved difficult, particularly for humans. The value is usually assumed to be +3–5‰ in the archaeological literature. We report here the first (to our knowledge) data from humans on isotopically known diets, comparing dietary intake and a body tissue sample, that of red blood cells. Samples were taken from 11 subjects on controlled diets for a 30-day period, where the controlled diets were designed to match each individual's habitual diet, thus reducing problems with short-term changes in diet causing isotopic changes in the body pool. The Δ 15N diet-RBC was measured as +3.5‰. Using measured offsets from other studies, we estimate the human Δ 15N diet-keratin as +5.0–5.3‰, which is in good agreement with values derived from the two other studies using individual diet records. We also estimate a value for Δ 15N diet-collagen of ≍6‰, again in combination with measured offsets from other studies. This value is larger than usually assumed in palaeodietary studies, which suggests that the proportion of animal protein in prehistoric human diet may have often been overestimated in isotopic studies of palaeodiet. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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          R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing.

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            Validity and repeatability of a simple index derived from the short physical activity questionnaire used in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study.

            To assess the validity and repeatability of a simple index designed to rank participants according to their energy expenditure estimated by self-report, by comparison with objectively measured energy expenditure assessed by heart-rate monitoring with individual calibration. Energy expenditure was assessed over one year by four separate episodes of 4-day heart-rate monitoring, a method previously validated against whole-body calorimetry and doubly labelled water. Cardio-respiratory fitness was assessed by four repeated measures of sub-maximum oxygen uptake. At the end of the 12-month period, participants completed a physical activity questionnaire that assessed past-year activity. A simple four-level physical activity index was derived by combining occupational physical activity together with time participating in cycling and other physical exercise (such as keep fit, aerobics, swimming and jogging). One hundred and seventy-three randomly selected men and women aged 40 to 65 years. The repeatability of the physical activity index was high (weighted kappa=0.6, ). There were positive associations between the physical activity index from the questionnaire and the objective measures of the ratio of daytime energy expenditure to resting metabolic rate and cardio-respiratory fitness As an indirect test of validity, there was a positive association between the physical activity index and the ratio of energy intake, assessed by 7-day food diaries, to predicted basal metabolic rate. The summary index of physical activity derived from the questions used in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) study suggest it is useful for ranking participants in terms of their physical activity in large epidemiological studies. The index is simple and easy to comprehend, which may make it suitable for situations that require a concise, global index of activity.
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              Collagen turnover in the adult femoral mid-shaft: modeled from anthropogenic radiocarbon tracer measurements.

              We have measured the (14)C content of human femoral mid-shaft collagen to determine the dynamics of adult collagen turnover, using the sudden doubling and subsequent slow relaxation of global atmospheric (14)C content due to nuclear bomb testing in the 1960s and 1970s as a tracer. (14)C measurements were made on bone collagen from 67 individuals of both sexes who died in Australia in 1990-1993, spanning a range of ages at death from 40 to 97, and these measurements were compared with values predicted by an age-dependent turnover model. We found that the dataset could constrain models of collagen turnover, with the following outcomes: 1) Collagen turnover rate of females decreases, on average, from 4%/yr to 3%/yr from 20 to 80 years. Male collagen turnover rates average 1.5-3%/yr over the same period. 2) For both sexes the collagen turnover rate during adolescent growth is much higher (5-15%/yr at age 10-15 years), with males having a significantly higher turnover rate than have females, by up to a factor of 2. 3) Much of the variation in residual bomb (14)C in a person's bone can be attributed to individual variation in turnover rate, but of no more than about 30% of the average values for adults. 4) Human femoral bone collagen isotopically reflects an individual's diet over a much longer period of time than 10 years, including a substantial portion of collagen synthesised during adolescence.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Am J Phys Anthropol
                Am. J. Phys. Anthropol
                ajpa
                American Journal of Physical Anthropology
                Wiley Subscription Services, Inc., A Wiley Company (Hoboken )
                0002-9483
                1096-8644
                November 2012
                : 149
                : 3
                : 426-434
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge UK
                [2 ]McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge UK
                [3 ]MRC Dunn Human Nutrition Unit, Wellcome Trust/MRC, Building Cambridge, UK
                [4 ]Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University of Reading UK
                [5 ]Department of Public Health and Primary Care, MRC Centre for Nutritional Epidemiology in Cancer Prevention and Survival, University of Cambridge UK
                Author notes
                *Correspondence to: T.C. O'Connell, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Downing St, Cambridge, CB4 3DZ, UK. E-mail: tco21@ 123456cam.ac.uk

                Grant sponsor: The Wellcome Trust; Grant number: WT074229. Grant sponsors: Medical Research Council, World Cancer Research Fund.

                Article
                10.1002/ajpa.22140
                3483624
                23042579
                be4f4218-cbef-408a-a68e-865b3f580db4
                Copyright © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 01 May 2010
                : 10 August 2010
                Categories
                Research Articles

                Anthropology
                discrimination factor,trophic level,blood,keratin,nutritional biomarker,collagen
                Anthropology
                discrimination factor, trophic level, blood, keratin, nutritional biomarker, collagen

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