13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food

Abstract Background: 13C and 15N isotopes in human tissue reflects the relative proportions of marine and terrestrial food consumed by the individual. Objective: To measure 13C and 15N in liver tissue from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes Methods: Liver tissue was obtained at autopsy in 1992-1994 from 60...

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Published in:European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/44657
https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.67
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spelling fttrinitycoll:oai:tara.tcd.ie:2262/44657 2023-05-15T16:29:08+02:00 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food 2010-12-14T22:19:07Z http://hdl.handle.net/2262/44657 https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.67 en eng Nature Publishing Group 1476-5640 (eISSN) 0954-3007.2009EJCN0046 0954-3007 (ISSN) 2009EJCN0046RR (manuscript) http://hdl.handle.net/2262/44657 European Journal of Clinical Nutrition doi:10.1038/ejcn.2010.67 ejcn (publisher-id) Copyright ? 2010, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 6 months 13Carbon Greenland mass spectrometry nutrition Denmark Inuit 15Nitrogen stable isotopes liver 2010 fttrinitycoll https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.67 2020-02-16T13:49:57Z Abstract Background: 13C and 15N isotopes in human tissue reflects the relative proportions of marine and terrestrial food consumed by the individual. Objective: To measure 13C and 15N in liver tissue from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes Methods: Liver tissue was obtained at autopsy in 1992-1994 from 60 Inuit (median age 61 y) and in 1986 from 15 Danes (median age 84 y). By sieving, liver tissue was separated in a "cellular fraction" and a "connective tissue fraction". 13C and 15N in dry liver tissue was measured on a mass spectrometer. ?13C indicates 13C content relative to IAEA-CH-6 Reference Standard. ?15N indicates 15N content relative to Atmospheric Nitrogen Reference Standard. Results: Inuit: Median ?13C was -21.2? in cellular and -20.0? in connective tissue fractions (p=0.001). Median ?15N was 10.6? in both cellular and connective tissue. Body mass index was negatively correlated with ?13C in connective tissue (rs=-0.42, p=0.057). Danes: Median ?13C was -27.0? in cellular and -24.3? in connective tissue (p=0.11). Median ?15N was 9.5? in cellular and 8.9? in connective tissue (p=0.5). Inuit had higher ?13C than Danes in both cellular and connective tissue (p<0.001) as well as higher ?15N in cellular tissue (p=0.01). Conclusions: Inuit displayed considerable variation in the ratio between marine/terrestrial food consumption, because elderly Inuit still adhere to the traditional hunters food of marine origin, whereas younger urbanized Inuit consume more terrestrial Western fare. Danes consumed food of almost exclusively terrestrial origin. Key words: 13Carbon; Denmark; Greenland; Inuit; liver; 15Nitrogen; nils.milman@webspeed.dk (Milman, Nils) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Milman, Nils) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Laursen, Jens) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Mulvad, Gert) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Pedersen, Henning) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Pedersen, Agnes) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Saaby, Henrik) DENMARK Accepted: 2010-04-14 Received: 2009-02-03 Revised: 2010-04-14 Other/Unknown Material Greenland greenlandic inuit The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive) Greenland Pedersen ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.668,-66.668) Nils ENVELOPE(48.017,48.017,-68.067,-68.067) European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 64 7 739 744
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Dublin, Trinity College: TARA (Trinity's Access to Research Archive)
op_collection_id fttrinitycoll
language English
topic 13Carbon
Greenland
mass spectrometry
nutrition
Denmark
Inuit
15Nitrogen
stable isotopes
liver
spellingShingle 13Carbon
Greenland
mass spectrometry
nutrition
Denmark
Inuit
15Nitrogen
stable isotopes
liver
13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
topic_facet 13Carbon
Greenland
mass spectrometry
nutrition
Denmark
Inuit
15Nitrogen
stable isotopes
liver
description Abstract Background: 13C and 15N isotopes in human tissue reflects the relative proportions of marine and terrestrial food consumed by the individual. Objective: To measure 13C and 15N in liver tissue from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes Methods: Liver tissue was obtained at autopsy in 1992-1994 from 60 Inuit (median age 61 y) and in 1986 from 15 Danes (median age 84 y). By sieving, liver tissue was separated in a "cellular fraction" and a "connective tissue fraction". 13C and 15N in dry liver tissue was measured on a mass spectrometer. ?13C indicates 13C content relative to IAEA-CH-6 Reference Standard. ?15N indicates 15N content relative to Atmospheric Nitrogen Reference Standard. Results: Inuit: Median ?13C was -21.2? in cellular and -20.0? in connective tissue fractions (p=0.001). Median ?15N was 10.6? in both cellular and connective tissue. Body mass index was negatively correlated with ?13C in connective tissue (rs=-0.42, p=0.057). Danes: Median ?13C was -27.0? in cellular and -24.3? in connective tissue (p=0.11). Median ?15N was 9.5? in cellular and 8.9? in connective tissue (p=0.5). Inuit had higher ?13C than Danes in both cellular and connective tissue (p<0.001) as well as higher ?15N in cellular tissue (p=0.01). Conclusions: Inuit displayed considerable variation in the ratio between marine/terrestrial food consumption, because elderly Inuit still adhere to the traditional hunters food of marine origin, whereas younger urbanized Inuit consume more terrestrial Western fare. Danes consumed food of almost exclusively terrestrial origin. Key words: 13Carbon; Denmark; Greenland; Inuit; liver; 15Nitrogen; nils.milman@webspeed.dk (Milman, Nils) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Milman, Nils) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Laursen, Jens) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Mulvad, Gert) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Pedersen, Henning) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Pedersen, Agnes) Department of Clinical Biochemistry - Ringstedgade 61, N?stved, Denmark 4700--> - DENMARK (Saaby, Henrik) DENMARK Accepted: 2010-04-14 Received: 2009-02-03 Revised: 2010-04-14
title 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
title_short 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
title_full 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
title_fullStr 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
title_full_unstemmed 13Carbon and 15Nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from Greenlandic Inuit and Danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
title_sort 13carbon and 15nitrogen isotopes in autopsy liver tissue samples from greenlandic inuit and danes: consumption of marine versus terrestrial food
publisher Nature Publishing Group
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2262/44657
https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.67
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.013,140.013,-66.668,-66.668)
ENVELOPE(48.017,48.017,-68.067,-68.067)
geographic Greenland
Pedersen
Nils
geographic_facet Greenland
Pedersen
Nils
genre Greenland
greenlandic
inuit
genre_facet Greenland
greenlandic
inuit
op_relation 1476-5640 (eISSN)
0954-3007.2009EJCN0046
0954-3007 (ISSN)
2009EJCN0046RR (manuscript)
http://hdl.handle.net/2262/44657
European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
doi:10.1038/ejcn.2010.67
ejcn (publisher-id)
op_rights Copyright ? 2010, European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
6 months
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2010.67
container_title European Journal of Clinical Nutrition
container_volume 64
container_issue 7
container_start_page 739
op_container_end_page 744
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