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The proportion of the population over 65 years of age is increasing
steadily in most industrialized countries. In the United States the
proportion of elderly people has risen from four percent in 1900 to
11 % in 1978, and is projected to be 14% by the year 2000. The
occurrence of debilitating chronic diseases in the elderly
increases with each additional year. These diseases, along with the
natural loss of tissue function that occurs throughout adult life,
impose a heavy burden on the health care system. Nutri tion plays
an important etiologic role in many of these degenerative changes.
Conse quently, the aging segment of the population presents a
challenge to the nutrition scientist, who should be able to
recommend optimal intakes of nutrients to minimize the functional
losses associated with aging and to optimize the health of those
already elderly. This sixth volume in the series Human Nutrition: A
Comprehensive Treatise provides a conspectus of the various
interactions of nutrition with the aging process and a
comprehensive survey of current knowledge of the amounts of
individual nutrients needed by the elderly. The volume begins with
a general survey of the multifaceted relationship of nutrition to
aging, followed by four chapters on how nutrition can affect
age-related changes in selected body functions. The next six
chapters cover the avail able evidence regarding the needs of the
elderly for dietary energy, protein, calcium, trace elements,
vitamins, and fiber."
The proportion of the population over 65 years of age is increasing
steadily in most industrialized countries. In the United States the
proportion of elderly people has risen from four percent in 1900 to
11 % in 1978, and is projected to be 14% by the year 2000. The
occurrence of debilitating chronic diseases in the elderly
increases with each additional year. These diseases, along with the
natural loss of tissue function that occurs throughout adult life,
impose a heavy burden on the health care system. Nutri tion plays
an important etiologic role in many of these degenerative changes.
Conse quently, the aging segment of the population presents a
challenge to the nutrition scientist, who should be able to
recommend optimal intakes of nutrients to minimize the functional
losses associated with aging and to optimize the health of those
already elderly. This sixth volume in the series Human Nutrition: A
Comprehensive Treatise provides a conspectus of the various
interactions of nutrition with the aging process and a
comprehensive survey of current knowledge of the amounts of
individual nutrients needed by the elderly. The volume begins with
a general survey of the multifaceted relationship of nutrition to
aging, followed by four chapters on how nutrition can affect
age-related changes in selected body functions. The next six
chapters cover the avail able evidence regarding the needs of the
elderly for dietary energy, protein, calcium, trace elements,
vitamins, and fiber."
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