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- Title
Increased Dietary Niacin Intake Improves Muscle Strength, Quality, and Glucose Homeostasis in Adults over 40 Years of Age.
- Authors
Xiang, S.; Li, Y.; Zhang, J.; Pan, W.; Lu, Yun; Liu, Shang-Long
- Abstract
Background & Aims: Age-related loss of skeletal muscle mass and strength begins at 40 years of age, and limited evidence suggests that niacin supplementation increases levels of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide in mouse muscle tissue. In addition, skeletal muscle has a key role in the body's processing of glucose. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the relationship between dietary niacin and skeletal muscle mass, strength, and glucose homeostasis in people aged 40 years and older. Methods: This study was an American population-based cross-sectional analysis using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Considering that some outcomes are only measured in specific survey cycles and subsamples, we established three data sets: a grip strength dataset (2011–2014, n=3772), a body mass components dataset (2011–2018, n=3279), and a glucose homeostasis dataset (1999–2018, n=9189). Dietary niacin and covariates were measured in all survey cycles. Linear regression or logistic regression models that adjusted for several main covariates, such as physical activity and diet, was used to evaluate the relationship between dietary niacin and grip strength, total lean mass, appendicular lean mass, total fat, trunk fat, total bone mineral content, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), fasting blood glycose, fasting insulin and sarcopenia risk. Subgroup analyses, a trend test, an interaction test, and a restricted cubic spline were used for further exploration. Results: Higher dietary niacin intake was significantly correlated with higher grip strength (β 0.275, 95% confidence intervals [CI] 0.192–0.357), higher total lean mass (β 0.060, 95% CI 0.045–0.074), higher appendicular lean mass (β 0.025, 95% CI 0.018–0.033), and higher total bone mineral content (β 0.005, 95% CI 0.004–0.007). By contrast, higher dietary niacin intake was significantly associated with lower total fat (β −0.061, 95% CI −0.076 to −0.046), lower trunk fat (β −0.041, 95% CI −0.050 to −0.032) and lower sarcopenia risk (OR 0.460, 95% CI 0.233 to 0.907). In addition, dietary niacin significantly reduced HOMA-IR, fasting blood glucose (in participants without diabetes), and fasting insulin (p <0.05). Conclusion: Niacin is associated with improved body composition (characterized by increased muscle mass and decreased fat content) and improved glucose homeostasis in dietary doses. Dietary niacin supplementation is a feasible way to alleviate age-related muscular loss.
- Subjects
UNITED States; NIACIN; HOMEOSTASIS; GRIP strength; SKELETAL muscle; CONFIDENCE intervals; FOOD consumption; AGE distribution; CROSS-sectional method; BLOOD sugar; REGRESSION analysis; PHYSICAL activity; MUSCLE strength; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; QUESTIONNAIRES; LOGISTIC regression analysis
- Publication
Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging, 2023, Vol 27, Issue 9, p709
- ISSN
1279-7707
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s12603-023-1967-0