Loading…

Dietary cis and trans monounsaturated and saturated FA and plasma lipids and lipoproteins in men

Trans monounsaturated fatty acids (TFA) are hypercholesterolemic compared to oleic acid to a degree approaching or equivalent to saturated FA. However, it is unknown to what extent these effects may be due to cholesterol lowering by oleic acid rather than elevation by saturated FA and TFA. In order...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Lipids 2002-02, Vol.37 (2), p.123-131
Main Authors: Judd, Joseph T., Baer, David J., Clevidence, Beverly A., Kris‐Etherton, Penny, Muesing, Richard A., Iwane, Marika
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Trans monounsaturated fatty acids (TFA) are hypercholesterolemic compared to oleic acid to a degree approaching or equivalent to saturated FA. However, it is unknown to what extent these effects may be due to cholesterol lowering by oleic acid rather than elevation by saturated FA and TFA. In order to better understand the impact of replacing TFA in foods, it is first necessary to know the relative lipid‐modifying effects of the major FA that change as TFA are lowered or removed. For 5 wk, 50 normocholesterolemic men were fed controlled diets providing approximately 15% of energy from protein, 39% from fat, and 46% from carbohydrate in a randomized, 6×6, crossover design. Eight percent of energy was replaced across diets with the following: carbohydrate (CHO) (1∶1 simple to complex); oleic acid (OL); TFA; stearic acid (STE); TFA/STE (4% of energy from each); carbon 12∶0 16∶0 saturated FA (LMP). LDL cholesterol concentrations (mmol/l) were as follows (different superscripts indicate significance at P≤0.01): OL 2.95a; CHO 3.05a,b; STE 3.10b,c; LMP 3.21c,d; TFA+STE 3.32d,e; and TFA 3.36e. HDL cholesterol concentrations (mmol/L) were as allows: STE 1.16a; IFA 1.16a,b; TFA/STE 1.17a,b; CHO 1.19b; OL 1.24c; and LMP 1.30d. Triacylglycerides were highest after STE (1.13) and lowest after OL (0.88) (P
ISSN:0024-4201
1558-9307
DOI:10.1007/s11745-002-0871-9