Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.)

Scopus

Scopus profile and journal metrics

This journal is indexed in Scopus. Use these metrics for a quick publishing snapshot, then open the Scopus page for the authoritative profile.

Scopus
Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Indexed in Scopus since 2022
CiteScore 1.0
Indexed since 2022
First decision 7 Days
Submission to acceptance 45 Days
Acceptance to publication 14 Days
Acceptance rate 8%

SCImago

SCImago Journal Rank preview

Use SCImago when you want a quick visual view of the journal ranking profile and external discoverability signals.

Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) SCImago Journal & Country Rank

DOAJ

Directory of Open Access Journals listing

The DOAJ record is useful for readers, librarians, and authors who want a direct open-access directory entry for the journal.

DOAJ
Palestinian Medical and Pharmaceutical Journal (Pal. Med. Pharm. J.) Open directory record
Original full research article

Assessment of Dairy Products and Protein Intake: Implications for Body Composition in Saudi Soccer Elite Athletes

Published
2025-03-06
Pages
213 - 220
Full text

Keywords

  • Body Composition
  • Fat percentage
  • Body mass index
  • Health Implications
  • Protein

Abstract

Well-designed diets and proper nutrient intake are crucial factors that benefit health, enhance physical performance, and lead to better competitive results. In this study, our aim was to evaluate the associations between the consumption of dairy products and protein intake with body composition via body mass index (BMI) and fat percentage among Saudi soccer elite athletes. To achieve this, a cross-sectional, self-administered Saudi Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ) was completed by 81 elite Saudi soccer athletes aged between 18 and 25 years, with a mean age of 19 years, to assess their food intake. Body fat percentage was measured using skinfold thickness, and BMI was calculated for all participants, with a mean BMI of 22 (SD = 2). Our results revealed no statistically significant relationship between the consumption indexes of eggs, meat, chicken, fish, tuna, organ meat, milk, leben (fermented milk products), cream cheese, yoghurt, and labneh (Middle Eastern soft cheese) with fat percentage and BMI. The correlation coefficients were relatively low (r= 0.125, p-value= 0.547 and r=0.077, p-value= 0.882 respectively). Therefore, our findings suggest no association between protein and dairy product intake and BMI and fat percentage among Saudi soccer elite athletes. Thus, it's essential for soccer athletes and coaches to be mindful of making wise food choices to achieve better competitive results and maximize performance.

Article history

Received
2024-09-04
Accepted
2024-11-15
Available online
2025-03-06
بحث أصيل كامل

Assessment of Dairy Products and Protein Intake: Implications for Body Composition in Saudi Soccer Elite Athletes

Published
2025-03-06
الصفحات
213 - 220
البحث كاملا

الكلمات الإفتتاحية

  • Body Composition
  • Fat percentage
  • Body mass index
  • Health Implications
  • Protein

الملخص

Well-designed diets and proper nutrient intake are crucial factors that benefit health, enhance physical performance, and lead to better competitive results. In this study, our aim was to evaluate the associations between the consumption of dairy products and protein intake with body composition via body mass index (BMI) and fat percentage among Saudi soccer elite athletes. To achieve this, a cross-sectional, self-administered Saudi Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ) was completed by 81 elite Saudi soccer athletes aged between 18 and 25 years, with a mean age of 19 years, to assess their food intake. Body fat percentage was measured using skinfold thickness, and BMI was calculated for all participants, with a mean BMI of 22 (SD = 2). Our results revealed no statistically significant relationship between the consumption indexes of eggs, meat, chicken, fish, tuna, organ meat, milk, leben (fermented milk products), cream cheese, yoghurt, and labneh (Middle Eastern soft cheese) with fat percentage and BMI. The correlation coefficients were relatively low (r= 0.125, p-value= 0.547 and r=0.077, p-value= 0.882 respectively). Therefore, our findings suggest no association between protein and dairy product intake and BMI and fat percentage among Saudi soccer elite athletes. Thus, it's essential for soccer athletes and coaches to be mindful of making wise food choices to achieve better competitive results and maximize performance.

Article history

تاريخ التسليم
2024-09-04
تاريخ القبول
2024-11-15
Available online
2025-03-06