Women's Health


 
 
Soy Protein and Bone Health
 
Osteoporosis Basics | Nutrition & Bone Health | Soy Protein Benefits
 

Soy Protein Benefits

 
Since the prevalence of osteoporosis isn't the same across cultures, researchers are looking to other cultures for clues to possible ways of reducing this disease. Surveys of women in Japan, for example, have raised questions about factors affecting bone health. Although Japanese women consume less calcium than most women in Western countries and are unlikely to use Estrogen Replacement Therapy (ERT) or Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT), they have a lower prevalence of fractures.

Some researchers believe that part of the answer to this puzzle may lie with the high intake of soyfoods in the traditional Japanese diet. They first looked at the effects of soy protein itself on calcium metabolism. More recently, research has focused on the potential effects of the isoflavones found in soy.

Soy Protein and Calcium
Scientists have extended the scope of the research showing that the amount of calcium excreted increases as protein intake goes up. They discovered that not all types of protein have the same effect-protein from animal sources causes much greater calcium loss than vegetable protein. This has been confirmed in a study of 755 Japanese men and women. Researchers found that consuming animal protein was associated with an increase in calcium excretion. However, they found no significant relationship between calcium excretion and the consumption of plant protein.

These findings become more meaningful when they are translated into the effect on bone fractures. As part of the large Nurses' Health Study, researchers looked at usual dietary intake and fracture rates in 85,900 women. First, they compared women averaging less than 68 grams of protein per day with those consuming more than 95 grams. The woman eating more protein had an increased risk of fracturing their forearm. Next, the researchers evaluated the type of protein being consumed. The increased risk of forearm fracture was seen in women consuming animal protein. Consumption of vegetable protein, however, was not associated with an increased risk.

The Isoflavone Story
The isoflavones found in soy and thus soy protein are genistein, daidzein, and glycitein.

Isoflavones can be classified as phytoestrogens, which are substances in plants that have chemical structures resembling estrogen. Isoflavones actually have several potential modes of action in the body. Depending on the circumstances, they may either act like a weak estrogen, act as an antiestrogen (blocking some effects of estrogen), or have effects not related to estrogen.

Purified genistein has been shown to slow the activity of cells that break down bone- osteoclasts- in the laboratory and in animals. Other researchers also found that genistein directly inhibited the breakdown of bone tissue in the laboratory.

Some animal research has shown genistein's effects on preventing bone loss to be similar to those of estrogen. Where genistein and estrogen differed is that the isoflavone had the benefit of not affecting the uterus.

Casein and nonfat dry milk. In this short-term study the women receiving isolated soy protein increased bone mineral density in the lumbar portion of their spine.

References
View bone health references list.

 

 
   
  Top of Page