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 | | From: | Zee | | Subject: | dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 03:43:06 -0800 |
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 | Dietary Fat Quality May be More Important Than Fat Quantity in Reducing Risk of Cardiovascular Deaths in Middle-Aged Men
CHICAGO - The type of dietary fats consumed by middle-aged men, especially polyunsaturated fats and linoleic acids, may be more important than total fat intake in reducing the risk of cardiovascular deaths, according to a study in the January 24 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine.
According to background information in the article, substitution of dietary polyunsaturated fat has been recommended for several decades in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but few studies have provided scientific support for the advice. Some metabolic studies show that polyunsaturated fats lower serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentration [the so-called 'bad cholesterol'], while saturated fat increases LDL-C. Linoleic acid is a liquid polyunsaturated fatty acid abundant in plant fat and oils (e.g., flaxseed, linseed oil).
David E. Laaksonen, M.D., Ph.D., from University of Kuopio, Finland, and colleagues, assessed the dietary linoleic and total polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) intake with cardiovascular and overall rates of death in 1,551 middle-aged men living in eastern Finland. The assessments were made through food records and blood tests for glucose and serum cholesterol levels.
"During the 15-year follow-up, 78 men died of CVD and 225 of any cause," the researchers report. "Middle-aged men with proportions of serum linoleic acid, n-6 (omega-6) fatty acids, and especially PUFA in the upper third were up to three times less likely to die of CVD than men with proportions in the lower third. Dietary intake of linoleic acid and total PUFA as assessed with a 4-day food record was also inversely associated with CVD, but total fat intake was not."
In conclusion the authors write: "Dietary fat quality thus seems more important than fat quantity in the reduction of CVD mortality in middle-aged men. Carrying out recommendations to replace saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat in the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease may substantially decrease CVD and to a lesser degree overall mortality."
(Arch Intern Med. 2005;165: 193-199.
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 | | From: | montygram | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 17:13:04 -0800 |
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 | Typical nonsense "study." Peoples have used coconut oil and palm kernel oils as dietary staples for thousands of years, and some still do, and yet, no heart disease. The problem is how unhealthy "red meat" is, not the saturated fatty acids. It's all about oxidative stress as the mechanism, and it's the polyunsaturated fatty acids in meat, not the saturated ones, than can produce oxidative stress, though the iron content, the oxidized cholesterol, the high tryptophan content, etc. are also problems. Also, there is the social factor, that is, those who say they eat less "saturated fat" generally take care of themselves better than those who say "I just eat what I want, and I love pork rinds aned greasy burgers." Basically, this kind of "study" is more of a sociological document than a scientific one. I've been packing my body with loads of highly saturated fats and non-oxidized cholesterol for a few years now. These substances should be dietary staples, not avoided as if they were "disease causing." I'm the only one in my family (I'm 40, they are old or a few years younger) who is not obese and does not have a "chronic disease." A recent MRA showed no signs of atherosclerotic plaque. My cholesterol was 209 with 63 HDL and 129 LDL on the last test, and the glucose was 75. TGs were in normal range.
Zee wrote: > Dietary Fat Quality May be More Important Than Fat Quantity in Reducing > Risk of Cardiovascular Deaths in Middle-Aged Men > > > > CHICAGO - The type of dietary fats consumed by middle-aged men, > especially polyunsaturated fats and linoleic acids, may be more > important than total fat intake in reducing the risk of cardiovascular > deaths, according to a study in the January 24 issue of Archives of > Internal Medicine. > > > > According to background information in the article, substitution of > dietary polyunsaturated fat has been recommended for several decades in > the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but few studies > have provided scientific support for the advice. Some metabolic > studies show that polyunsaturated fats lower serum low-density > lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentration [the so-called 'bad > cholesterol'], while saturated fat increases LDL-C. Linoleic acid > is a liquid polyunsaturated fatty acid abundant in plant fat and oils > (e.g., flaxseed, linseed oil). > > > > David E. Laaksonen, M.D., Ph.D., from University of Kuopio, Finland, > and colleagues, assessed the dietary linoleic and total polyunsaturated > fatty acid (PUFA) intake with cardiovascular and overall rates of death > in 1,551 middle-aged men living in eastern Finland. The assessments > were made through food records and blood tests for glucose and serum > cholesterol levels. > > > > "During the 15-year follow-up, 78 men died of CVD and 225 of any > cause," the researchers report. "Middle-aged men with proportions > of serum linoleic acid, n-6 (omega-6) fatty acids, and especially PUFA > in the upper third were up to three times less likely to die of CVD > than men with proportions in the lower third. Dietary intake of > linoleic acid and total PUFA as assessed with a 4-day food record was > also inversely associated with CVD, but total fat intake was not." > > > > In conclusion the authors write: "Dietary fat quality thus seems more > important than fat quantity in the reduction of CVD mortality in > middle-aged men. Carrying out recommendations to replace saturated fat > with polyunsaturated fat in the primary prevention of cardiovascular > disease may substantially decrease CVD and to a lesser degree overall > mortality." > > (Arch Intern Med. 2005;165: 193-199.
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 | | From: | montygram | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 22 Jan 2005 12:26:27 -0800 |
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 | Good question, Paul. What happens is that the oxidized cholesterol gets stuck in the interstitial spaces in your arteries and then a chronic inflammatory response occurs. It's like digging a hole and having too much dirt after you fill the hole back in (if you want a simplistic analogy). Coconut oil does not oxidize cholesterol, whereas polyunsaturates, in general, do. Do a search on www.pub.med.com and see for yourself (search for oxysterols and oxidized cholesterol). As for Zwala, how do you account for generations of people living on diets with highly saturated fatty acids in their staple foods? These researchers are "fools" or shills, and I don't cared which.
Regarding the "study:"
The serum issue involves the PUFAs being metabolized into much more dangerous substances (e.g., isoprostanes), since the differences in serum PUFAs in most peoples' diets these days is negligible. I used to post recipes here (that appeared once a week in my local newspaper), because you could see from them that what most people eat, including "vegetarian" recipes, contained very similar amounts of saturated fatty acids (I think Gary Taubes has made this point in his famous articles on this issue). Only if you use a lot of butter/cream, chocolate, coconut, or palm kernel oil as base ingredients would you have to worry about being "above normal" in your saturated fatty acid consumption.
The other point, about "saturated fat" consumption, really implicates "red meat" in particular, and again the differences between the fatty acid composition is negligible. For example, lard at about 39% saturated fat and chicken/turkey around 30% is nothing compared to coconut oil at 92%. There are still several large populations using coconut oil these days (Sri Lanka, Phillipines, etc.), and on that diet, "heart disease" is very rare (check out WHO statistics). How can people who consider themselves "scientific experts" and who want to tell millions of people what to do be totally unaware of the millions of people who consume huge amounts of saturated fatty acids, and yet have an incredibly low incidence of heart disease? Don't they feel any responsibility to at least address this glaring contradiction in their claims?
My guess is that these "researchers" had their "saturated fat is bad" idea in mind when they began the study, and only looked at the evidence in a way that supported this notion, when there is ample evidence to the contrary. You can't eat foods high in cholesterol and expect to do anything you want with them. Cooking them at high temperatures while exposed to air is something I would never do. Using a highly unsaturated oil as a cooking oil is also really unhealthy, as opposed to using a tiny amount of tahini (for taste) at low temperatures, which is something I often do. These "researchers" are basically clueless. If you don't do some independent thinking and research, these guys will have you changing your diet every couple of days
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 | | From: | zwalanga at yahoo.com | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 17:40:39 -0800 |
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 | montygram wrote: > Typical nonsense "study." Peoples have used coconut oil and palm > kernel oils as dietary staples for thousands of years, and some still > do, and yet, no heart disease. The problem is how unhealthy "red meat" > is, not the saturated fatty acids. It's all about oxidative stress as > the mechanism, and it's the polyunsaturated fatty acids in meat, not > the saturated ones, than can produce oxidative stress, though the iron > content, the oxidized cholesterol, the high tryptophan content, etc. > are also problems. Also, there is the social factor, that is, those > who say they eat less "saturated fat" generally take care of themselves > better than those who say "I just eat what I want, and I love pork > rinds aned greasy burgers." Basically, this kind of "study" is more of > a sociological document than a scientific one. > I've been packing my body with loads of highly saturated fats and > non-oxidized cholesterol for a few years now. These substances should > be dietary staples, not avoided as if they were "disease causing." I'm > the only one in my family (I'm 40, they are old or a few years younger) > who is not obese and does not have a "chronic disease." A recent MRA > showed no signs of atherosclerotic plaque. My cholesterol was 209 with > 63 HDL and 129 LDL on the last test, and the glucose was 75. TGs were > in normal range. > > Zee wrote: > > Dietary Fat Quality May be More Important Than Fat Quantity in > Reducing > > Risk of Cardiovascular Deaths in Middle-Aged Men > > > > > > > > CHICAGO - The type of dietary fats consumed by middle-aged men, > > especially polyunsaturated fats and linoleic acids, may be more > > important than total fat intake in reducing the risk of > cardiovascular > > deaths, according to a study in the January 24 issue of Archives of > > Internal Medicine. > > > > > > > > According to background information in the article, substitution of > > dietary polyunsaturated fat has been recommended for several decades > in > > the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but few > studies > > have provided scientific support for the advice. Some metabolic > > studies show that polyunsaturated fats lower serum low-density > > lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) concentration [the so-called 'bad > > cholesterol'], while saturated fat increases LDL-C. Linoleic acid > > is a liquid polyunsaturated fatty acid abundant in plant fat and oils > > (e.g., flaxseed, linseed oil). > > > > > > > > David E. Laaksonen, M.D., Ph.D., from University of Kuopio, Finland, > > and colleagues, assessed the dietary linoleic and total > polyunsaturated > > fatty acid (PUFA) intake with cardiovascular and overall rates of > death > > in 1,551 middle-aged men living in eastern Finland. The > assessments > > were made through food records and blood tests for glucose and serum > > cholesterol levels. > > > > > > > > "During the 15-year follow-up, 78 men died of CVD and 225 of any > > cause," the researchers report. "Middle-aged men with proportions > > of serum linoleic acid, n-6 (omega-6) fatty acids, and especially > PUFA > > in the upper third were up to three times less likely to die of CVD > > than men with proportions in the lower third. Dietary intake of > > linoleic acid and total PUFA as assessed with a 4-day food record was > > also inversely associated with CVD, but total fat intake was not." > > > > > > > > In conclusion the authors write: "Dietary fat quality thus seems more > > important than fat quantity in the reduction of CVD mortality in > > middle-aged men. Carrying out recommendations to replace saturated > fat > > with polyunsaturated fat in the primary prevention of cardiovascular > > disease may substantially decrease CVD and to a lesser degree overall > > mortality." > > > > (Arch Intern Med. 2005;165: 193-199.
I really have no set ideas here. It seems to me many men have cardiovascular problems beginning in their 40s no matter how they eat; eat like you describe, or eat like me--modified Mediterranean. (I wouldn't dare touch coconut oil or palm oil). I am constantly amazed at the different ways of eating that seem to work for different individuals.
Zee
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 | | From: | Happy Dog | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 04:01:54 -0500 |
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 | wrote in message news: >> > (Arch Intern Med. 2005;165: 193-199. > > > I really have no set ideas here. It seems to me many men have > cardiovascular problems beginning in their 40s no matter how they eat; > eat like you describe, or eat like me--modified Mediterranean. (I > wouldn't dare touch coconut oil or palm oil).
Bsed on, exactly, what?
I am constantly amazed at > the different ways of eating that seem to work for different > individuals.
"Work"? They lived longer? Felt better? Died of something unexpected for their peer group? Be specific.
m
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 | | From: | Paul E. Lehmann | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | Fri, 21 Jan 2005 21:54:22 -0500 |
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 | I am curious as to how or if one differentiates between cardiovascular disease and lesions from age related narrowing of the arteries without lesions.
I plead ignorance on the subject and am just trying to figure out if narrowing of the arteries is in itself cardiovascular disease or whether there has to be a lesion along with the narrowing in order for there to be a diagnosis of cardiovascular disease.
I can mentally picture water pipes with calcium deposits narrowing with time because of lime and other mineral deposits. I can also picture water pipes with a structural defect in the pipe which may eventually fail along with the mineral deposits.
In such a simplistic picture I can visualize the water pipes without the structural defect in the pipes continue to cary water for quite some time (although with a higher velocity because of the narrowing) without actually bursting. I suppose that the higher velocity caused by the narrowing could in itself increase the pressure in the pipe and eventually cause a structural failure in the pipe. Is this how it works? Does anyone really know?
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 | | From: | Sbharris[atsign]ix.netcom.com | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 21 Jan 2005 20:04:39 -0800 |
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 | COMMENT:
It's way too complicated a subject to discuss fully. The short form (which I can't do justice, so this is only approximate) is that vascular aging per se in absense of atherosclerosis can be studied in animals like the rat that don't get atherosclerosis or hypertension on standard diets. As they age, you can see standard "successful aging" which thickens the artery lining "intima" a bit, and causes the main wall "media" to expand and lose some elasticity. None of these things is enough to cause increases in pressure. Actually, what typically happens is diastolic pressure drops and systolic pressure remains the same, so that pulse pressure (systolic minus diastolic, or upper number minus lower one) increases a little without any hypertension. This happens as blood pressure characteristics come to be set by the large arteries and their characteristics in advanced "healthy" aging, as opposed to being set by small artery tone.
This is pretty much what happens in humans in the absense of disease, with aging. It's what is seen in undeveloped countries in people on a very low fat diet, who never get atherosclerosis or hypertension. Normal aging is a pulse pressure of 40 at age 40 and about 60 at age 80. Anything above a pulse pressure of around 80 at 80 usually means there's some artery damage by more than healthy aging.
By what? Well, hypertension itself, and diabetes, both cause worse intimal thickening and worse elasticity, so it looks like aging changes, but worse.
Atherosclerosis, a local fatty-tumor-like injury disease disease in blood vessels, has many causes, but starts with injury to the intima due to flexion or hypertension or chemical causes. You see it where arteries flex a lot, like the neck, the groin or knee, or in the bouncing heart. It starts with infiltration of the intima with foamy lessions, which eventually coalese into plaques.These are generally non-concentric and bulge into the artery from one side. This does NOT in an of itself increase the pressure. If blood can't go through, it just doesn't. Systemic pressure increases per se (systolic and diastolic increases) are due to disease mechanisms of other types, occuring in the smaller arteries, NOT due to disease like atherosclerosis in larger arteries. These pressure increases in turn cause damage (intimal thickening and loss of elasticity) in larger arteriies, as above, but cause and effect are in the direction indicated. The pressure increases cause the thickening in large vessels but not the reverse (the thickening and elasticity loss per se causes increased pulse pressure, but NOT hypertension). Similarly, hypertension also causes atherosclerosis, but NOT the other way around (with the exception occasionally of lessions in kidney arteries which directly cut off the kidney blood pressure sensing mechanisms, and can result in high blood pressure that way-- but this is rare and generally isn't the way it happens).
SBH
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 | | From: | Zee | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | 22 Jan 2005 13:05:24 -0800 |
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 | I simply do not know. I'm learning...!
See the last line in the second citation below (Sat Fats) which says:
"Therefore, the influence of varying saturated fatty acid intakes against a background of different individual lifestyles and genetic backgrounds should also be considered.
The first citation below (Dietary Fats) also very interesting, particularly for women. Thanks for your research montygram.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=3DRetrieve&db=3Dpubmed&do= pt=3DAbstract&list_uids=3D15531663 Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Nov;80(5):1175-84. * Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 Nov;80(5):1102-3.
Dietary fats, carbohydrate, and progression of coronary atherosclerosis in postmenopausal women.
Mozaffarian D, Rimm EB, Herrington DM.
Channing Laboratory, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. dmozaffa@hsph.harvard.edu
BACKGROUND: The influence of diet on atherosclerotic progression is not well established, particularly in postmenopausal women, in whom risk factors for progression may differ from those for men. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to investigate associations between dietary macronutrients and progression of coronary atherosclerosis among postmenopausal women. DESIGN: Quantitative coronary angiography was performed at baseline and after a mean follow-up of 3.1 y in 2243 coronary segments in 235 postmenopausal women with established coronary heart disease. Usual dietary intake was assessed at baseline. RESULTS: The mean (+/-SD) total fat intake was 25 +/- 6% of energy. In multivariate analyses, a higher saturated fat intake was associated with a smaller decline in mean minimal coronary diameter (P =3D 0.001) and less progression of coronary stenosis (P =3D 0.002) during follow-up. Compared with a 0.22-mm decline in the lowest quartile of intake, there was a 0.10-mm decline in the second quartile (P =3D 0.002), a 0.07-mm decline in the third quartile (P =3D 0.002), and no decline in the fourth quartile (P < 0.001); P for trend =3D 0.001. This inverse association was more pronounced among women with lower monounsaturated fat (P for interaction =3D 0.04) and higher carbohydrate (P for interaction =3D 0.004) intakes and possibly lower total fat intake (P for interaction =3D 0.09). Carbohydrate intake was positively associated with atherosclerotic progression (P =3D 0.001), particularly when the glycemic index was high. Polyunsaturated fat intake was positively associated with progression when replacing other fats (P =3D 0.04) but not when replacing carbohydrate or protein. Monounsaturated and total fat intakes were not associated with progression. CONCLUSIONS: In postmenopausal women with relatively low total fat intake, a greater saturated fat intake is associated with less progression of coronary atherosclerosis, whereas carbohydrate intake is associated with a greater progression.
PMID: 15531663 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=3DRetrieve&db=3Dpubmed&do= pt=3DAbstract&list_uids=3D15531663
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol. 80, No. 3, 550-559, September 2004 =A9 2004 American Society for Clinical Nutrition
COMMENTARY
Saturated fats: what dietary intake?1,2,3 J Bruce German and Cora J Dillard
1 From the Department of Food Science and Technology, University of California, Davis (JBG and CJD), and the Nestle Research Center, Lausanne, Switzerland (JBG) Saturated fats: what dietary intake? Conclusions:
Twenty years ago, government guidelines recommended that all persons consume a low-fat diet, with the advice being to "avoid too much fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol" (121). Consumption of a low-fat diet (defined as one containing 20% of energy from fat) was subsequently shown to induce atherogenic dyslipidemia (122, 123). On the basis of government guidelines, the food industry was obliged to change the formulation of foods to a preponderance of low-fat and nonfat products, with calories from carbohydrates being substituted for fat. It is now known that a high-carbohydrate diet can lead to the lipoprotein pattern (124) that characterizes atherogenic dyslipidemia. At the time the 1980 guidelines were established, there was no solid basis for understanding what the consequences of such overall dietary changes would be for most persons. The recommendation to lower saturated fat intake was based on a single marker of health outcome-a correlation between dietary saturated fat and the incidence of CAD, with blood cholesterol being the indicator of potential disease. Now, the most recent published recommendations are for all persons to reduce the saturated fat content of their diet (10% of total calories), although it was stated in the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee report (2) that "...no lower limit of saturated fat intake has been identified." The summary report by the Institute of Medicine (60) takes this recommendation one step further by clearly stating that "...there is no intake level of saturated fatty acids...at which there is no adverse effect." This nutritional rhetoric is driving the food industry to respond to governmental and public demands to decrease the amounts of all saturated fats from the food supply. The agricultural enterprise will continue to lower saturated fatty acids by every means possible.
Public health recommendations for the consumption of total fat and the composition of fat in the diet are being reevaluated, and this reevaluation is projected to be finished in 2004. To meet the body's daily energy and nutritional needs while minimizing the risk of chronic disease, the newest report on recommendations for healthy eating from the National Academies' Institute of Medicine is that adults should get 45-65% of their calories from carbohydrates, 20-35% from fat, and 10-35% from protein. It was recently pointed out that reducing the proportion of energy from fat below 30% is not supported by experimental evidence and that advice to decrease total fat intake has failed to have any effect on the prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease (125). The recent conference summary from the Nutrition Committee of the American Heart Association emphasized that studies with cardiovascular endpoints that go beyond the measurements of plasma lipids and lipoproteins are needed to evaluate the effects of individual fatty acids in humans (126).
At this time, research on how specific saturated fatty acids contribute to CAD and on the role each specific saturated fatty acid plays in other health outcomes is not sufficient to make global recommendations for all persons to remove saturated fats from their diet. No randomized clinical trials of low-fat diets (105) or low-saturated fat diets of sufficient duration have been carried out; thus, there is a lack of knowledge of how low saturated fat intake can be without the risk of potentially deleterious health outcomes. Although the removal of particular foods from the diet can be accomplished quickly, the removal of all saturated fats or particular saturated fatty acids from foods cannot be accomplished quickly by the agricultural community. This will require modification of existing foods and changes in policies to improve health, which in turn will require integration of nutrition needs with economic growth and development; agriculture and food production, processing, and marketing; health care and education; and changing of lifestyles and food choices by individual consumers. It requires years to change the course of commodity manipulation and to make drastic changes in the food supply. Before such implementation can be achieved, all food sources of specific saturated fatty acids must be accurately identified and quantified, the core commodities will need to be changed at the level of production, agricultural processes will require new approaches and procedures, and food formulations will need to be changed. The question remains, What is an appropriate amount to which saturated fatty acids in the diet can be lowered for optimal health? Before recommendations are made to further lower the content of these components in the food supply, should we not wait until scientific evidence clearly shows that this is the healthiest direction to take?
Because of the paucity of scientific understanding of the role of specific fatty acids in humans beyond the effects on total and LDL cholesterol, research on the effects of specific fatty acids in a broader health context should be viewed as a clear research priority. Given the varying health status of much of the developed world, it would also be appropriate to explore these effects in a range of human metabolic phenotypes, including persons with various body mass index values, persons with insulin resistance, and persons with chronic inflammation. Finally, the scientific community not only is recognizing the interindividual variation in dietary response and health but is also building the tools to measure it. Therefore, the influence of varying saturated fatty acid intakes against a background of different individual lifestyles and genetic backgrounds should also be considered.
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 | | From: | Jim Chinnis | | Subject: | Re: dietary fat & cardio deaths: quality not quantity | | Date: | Sat, 22 Jan 2005 23:00:36 GMT |
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 | Another interesting paper is
Mensink RP, Zock PL, Kester AD, Katan MB. Effects of dietary fatty acids and carbohydrates on the ratio of serum total to HDL cholesterol and on serum lipids and apolipoproteins: a meta-analysis of 60 controlled trials.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2003 May;77(5):1146-55. BACKGROUND: The effects of dietary fats on the risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) have traditionally been estimated from their effects on LDL cholesterol. Fats, however, also affect HDL cholesterol, and the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol is a more specific marker of CAD than is LDL cholesterol. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to evaluate the effects of individual fatty acids on the ratis of total to HDL cholesterol and on serum lipoproteins. DESIGN: We performed a meta-analysis of 60 selected trials and calculated the effects of the amount and type of fat on total:HDL cholesterol and on other lipids. RESULTS: The ratio did not change if carbohydrates replaced saturated fatty acids, but it decreased if cis unsaturated fatty acids replaced saturated fatty acids. The effect on total:HDL cholesterol of replacing trans fatty acids with a mix of carbohydrates and cis unsaturated fatty acids was almost twice as large as that of replacing saturated fatty acids. Lauric acid greatly increased total cholesterol, but much of its effect was on HDL cholesterol. Consequently, oils rich in lauric acid decreased the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol. Myristic and palmitic acids had little effect on the ratio, and stearic acid reduced the ratio slightly. Replacing fats with carbohydrates increased fasting triacylglycerol concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: The effects of dietary fats on total:HDL cholesterol may differ markedly from their effects on LDL. The effects of fats on these risk markers should not in themselves be considered to reflect changes in risk but should be confirmed by prospective observational studies or clinical trials. By that standard, risk is reduced most effectively when trans fatty acids and saturated fatty acids are replaced with cis unsaturated fatty acids. The effects of carbohydrates and of lauric acid-rich fats on CAD risk remain uncertain.
Full-text is at: http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/full/77/5/1146
See the figure at http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/full/77/5/1146/F1 -- Jim Chinnis Warrenton, Virginia, USA jchinnis@alum.mit.edu
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