4.5 Article

Physically inactive adults are the main users of sports dietary supplements in the capital of Brazil

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 61, Issue 5, Pages 2321-2330

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00394-022-02799-x

Keywords

Food supplements; Prevalence; Exercise; Physical activity

Funding

  1. Federal District Research Foundation (FAPDF) [193.000.994-2015]
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) [001]
  3. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [308630/2017-3]

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This study investigated the use of dietary supplements (DS) among adults in Brasilia, Brazil, and examined the relationship between sports dietary supplements (SDS) use and sociodemographic and lifestyle characteristics, body mass index, and total daily physical activity (PA). The results showed that SDS use was more common among individuals with higher socioeconomic status, younger age, and male gender, and most SDS users were physically inactive.
Purpose This cross-sectional study aimed to provide estimates of dietary supplements (DS) use and to examine the relationship between sports dietary supplements (SDS) use and sociodemographic and lifestyle characteristic, body mass index and total daily physical activity (PA) in the adult population of Brasilia, Brazil. Methods DS use was collected from 506 adults via a Food Frequency Questionnaire. DS were divided into multivitamin-minerals, electrolyte drinks, energy, protein, partial meal replacements, creatine, caffeine, and others. Electrolyte drinks, energy, and protein supplements were considered as SDS. PA was estimated from a 24-h PA recall, and total MET (metabolic equivalents)/day and MET-h/day were calculated. Participants were categorized as physically inactive or active according to MET-h/day. Results DS were used by 68% of adults; multivitamin-minerals (38%) and protein supplements (29%) were the most commonly used products. SDS use was associated with the highest socioeconomic level, younger age, and male gender, but not with PA. Also, most SDS users were physically inactive. Conclusion These findings indicate that SDS may be used unnecessarily by adults in Brasilia. Specific recommendations and control procedures for the use of SDS are warranted.

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