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Due to growing concerns about the health problems of ingesting animal protein, diets rich in plant protein have begun to spread.
Recently, a research article was published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, an authoritative journal in the field of endocrine and metabolic diseases, which aims to evaluate the relationship between dietary protein intake in women of childbearing age and reproductive hormones and occasional anovulation.
The study was completed at the University of Buffalo in Western New York, USA between 2005 and 2007.
Overall, 84% of the participants met the recommended dietary standard, which is the total protein content for women of childbearing age.
It can be seen that in women who meet the recommended total protein dietary standards, a lower intake of plant protein may interfere with normal ovulation function .
In women who meet the recommended total protein dietary standards, lower plant protein intake may interfere with normal ovulation function
Original source:
Original source:Keewan Kim.
org/10.
1210/clinem/dgab179" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Low intake of vegetable protein is associated with altered ovulatory function among healthy women of reproductive age in this message