Literature DB >> 19412746

[Human nutrition in the context of evolutionary medicine].

Alexander Ströhle1, Maike Wolters, Andreas Hahn.   

Abstract

Evolutionary medicine has gained increasing attention in recent years by implying that a food selection similar to that of the Paleolithic may prevent diseases. This article is an attempt to characterize the food selection during hominid evolution based on current paleontologic research. Hominid evolution can be divided into multiple phases; and the nutrition ecology of the plio-pleistocene hominids can be tentatively characterized. According to new results of isotope analysis, the Australopithecines did ingest small amounts of animal food already 4.5-2.5 million years ago, while consuming a mainly plant based abrasive diet, which was similar to that of recent chimpanzees. Compared to the Australopithecines, the first representatives of Homo such as H. erectus and H. habilis (2.5-1.5 million years before today) were likely to consume a diet providing more energy and nutrients, which might also have been related to the more gracile dentition. Like H. sapiens the members of this species also consumed an omnivore diet. Assumptions about the nutrition ecology of the archaic and the modern H. sapiens are often concluded by analogies based on the living of historic and recent foragers (hunter-gatherers). As the few detailed ethnographic data show, the diet composition of the individual hunter-gatherer groups varied considerably and ranged from a nearly pure animal-based diet to a diet dominated by plants. All in all the eating behaviour of prehistoric humans was, like that of their pleistocene ancestors, very flexible. Except for focussing on an energy and nutrient-rich diet there was neither specialization in certain foods, nor a typical plant-animal ratio nor a defined macronutrient distribution. Correspondingly, it is impossible to justify details given by representatives of evolutionary medicine on "the Paleolithic diet" empirically.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19412746     DOI: 10.1007/s00508-009-1139-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Wien Klin Wochenschr        ISSN: 0043-5325            Impact factor:   1.704


  83 in total

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4.  Isotope evidence for the intensive use of marine foods by Late Upper Palaeolithic humans.

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5.  The Masai of East Africa: some unique biological characteristics.

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6.  Carbohydrates and the diet-atherosclerosis connection--more between earth and heaven. Comment on the article "The atherogenic potential of dietary carbohydrate".

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Review 7.  Dietary lean red meat and human evolution.

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Journal:  Eur J Nutr       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 5.614

Review 8.  Brain-specific lipids from marine, lacustrine, or terrestrial food resources: potential impact on early African Homo sapiens.

Authors:  C Leigh Broadhurst; Yiqun Wang; Michael A Crawford; Stephen C Cunnane; John E Parkington; Walter F Schmidt
Journal:  Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2002-04       Impact factor: 2.231

Review 9.  The critical role played by animal source foods in human (Homo) evolution.

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10.  The carbon isotope ecology and diet of Australopithecus africanus at Sterkfontein, South Africa.

Authors:  Nikolaas J van der Merwe; J Francis Thackeray; Julia A Lee-Thorp; Julie Luyt
Journal:  J Hum Evol       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 3.895

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  2 in total

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Authors:  Cielo García-Montero; Oscar Fraile-Martínez; Ana M Gómez-Lahoz; Leonel Pekarek; Alejandro J Castellanos; Fernando Noguerales-Fraguas; Santiago Coca; Luis G Guijarro; Natalio García-Honduvilla; Angel Asúnsolo; Lara Sanchez-Trujillo; Guillermo Lahera; Julia Bujan; Jorge Monserrat; Melchor Álvarez-Mon; Miguel A Álvarez-Mon; Miguel A Ortega
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  2 in total

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