Literature DB >> 12936917

Effect of different forms of dietary hydrogenated fats on LDL particle size.

Jean-François Mauger1, Alice H Lichtenstein, Lynne M Ausman, Susan M Jalbert, Matti Jauhiainen, Christian Ehnholm, Benoît Lamarche.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dietary trans fatty acids (FAs), which are formed during the process of hydrogenating vegetable oil, are known to increase plasma LDL-cholesterol concentrations. However, their effect on LDL particle size has yet to be investigated.
OBJECTIVE: We investigated the effect of trans FA consumption on the electrophoretic characteristics of LDL particles.
DESIGN: Eighteen women and 18 men each consumed 5 experimental diets in random order for 35-d periods. Fat represented 30% of total energy intake in each diet, with two-thirds of the fat in the form of semiliquid margarine (0.6 g trans FAs/100 g fat), soft margarine (9.4 g trans FAs/100 g fat), shortening (13.6 g trans FAs/100 g fat), stick margarine (26.1 g trans FAs/100 g fat), or butter, which was low in trans FAs (2.6 g trans FAs/100 g fat) but rich in saturated fat. LDL particle size and distribution were characterized by nondenaturing, 2-16% polyacrylamide gradient gel electrophoresis.
RESULTS: Relative to the LDL particle size observed after consumption of the butter-enriched diet, LDL particle size decreased significantly and in a dose-dependent fashion with increasing amounts of dietary trans FAs (P < 0.001). Cholesterol concentrations in large (> 260 A) and medium-sized (255-260 A) LDL particles also increased proportionately to the amount of trans FAs in the diet.
CONCLUSION: Consumption of dietary trans FAs is associated with a deleterious increase in small, dense LDL, which further reinforces the importance of promoting diets low in trans FAs to favorably affect the lipoprotein profile.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12936917     DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/78.3.370

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0002-9165            Impact factor:   7.045


  33 in total

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Review 2.  Dietary trans fatty acids: review of recent human studies and food industry responses.

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Review 3.  Influence of dietary carbohydrate and fat on LDL and HDL particle distributions.

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Review 4.  Effects of trans fatty acids on glucose homeostasis: a meta-analysis of randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials.

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Review 6.  Current Evidence Supporting the Link Between Dietary Fatty Acids and Cardiovascular Disease.

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7.  Moderate compared to low dietary intake of trans-fatty acids impairs strength of old and aerobic capacity of young SAMP8 mice in both sexes.

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8.  Reduction in dietary trans fat intake is associated with decreased LDL particle number in a primary prevention population.

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Review 9.  Trans fatty acids: effects on metabolic syndrome, heart disease and diabetes.

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10.  Substitution of vegetable oil for a partially-hydrogenated fat favorably alters cardiovascular disease risk factors in moderately hypercholesterolemic postmenopausal women.

Authors:  Sonia Vega-López; Nirupa R Matthan; Lynne M Ausman; Masumi Ai; Seiko Otokozawa; Ernst J Schaefer; Alice H Lichtenstein
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