| Literature DB >> 23628720 |
Adam M Bernstein1, Brigid Titgemeier, Kristin Kirkpatrick, Mladen Golubic, Michael F Roizen.
Abstract
Numerous studies reveal the cardiovascular benefits of consuming dietary fiber and, especially, cereal fiber. Cereal fiber is associated with cardiovascular risk reduction through multiple mechanisms and consuming a variety of cereal fiber sources offers health benefits specific to the source. Certain cereal fibers have been studied more extensively than others and provide greater support for their incorporation into a healthful diet. β-glucan from oats or barley, or a combination of whole oats and barley, and soluble fiber from psyllium reduces the risk of coronary heart disease; inulin-type fructans added to foods and beverages may modestly decrease serum triacylglycerols; arabinoxylan and resistant starch may improve glycemic control. Individuals with low cereal fiber intake should increase their intake of whole grains in order to receive the benefits of whole grains in addition to fiber. For those adjusting to the texture and palatability of whole grains, turning to added-fiber products rich in β-glucan and psyllium may allow them to reach their fiber goals without increasing caloric intake.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23628720 PMCID: PMC3708330 DOI: 10.3390/nu5051471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Fibers of the Wheat Kernel.
Major dietary fibers from cereal grains with established or investigated cardiovascular health benefit 1.
| Fiber | Water Soluble (S) or Insoluble (I) | Viscosity | Fermentability | Major Cereal Sources | Properties that May Assist with Incorporation into Food [ | Cardiovascular Benefit [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beta-glucans | S | Highly viscous | High | Oats, barley | Able to be added to a range of different products, including cereal, soup, beverages | ≥3 g/day of β-glucan soluble fiber from whole oats or barley, or a combination thereof, can reduce the risk of coronary heart disease |
| Arabinoxylans 2 | S | Viscous | High | Barley, wheat, rye, rice, sorghum, oats, corn millet | May lower glycemic index of breads, while providing pleasing mouth feel and tenderness | ≥7 g/day of soluble fiber from psyllium seed husk can reduce the risk of coronary heart disease |
| Inulin-Type Fructans | S | Mostly viscous | High | Wheat | Used to replace fat or carbohydrates without affecting taste or texture | Not yet established |
| Resistant Starch 3 | S | Non-viscous | Variable (rate and degree depend on source and heat treatment) | RS1: partially milled grainsRS3: cooked & cooled rice, pasta | Palatable and provides mouth feel of refined carbohydrates | Not yet established |
1 Data from multiple sources [1,3,12,23,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44]; 2 Major component of psyllium considered to be an arabinoxylan [27]; 3 RS1: Resistant Starch Type 1; RS3: Resistant Starch Type 3.
Meta-analyses on β-glucans and psyllium in relation to serum cholesterol.
| First Author (year) | Number of included studies (Number of participants) ( | Age (mean or median) and/or age range of participants (years) | Intervention (mean, median, or range of dose) | Intervention duration (mean and/or range, days) | Main findings (mg/dL) (95% CI) | Risk of publication bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ripsin (1992) [ | 10 (1371) | 20–73 | Oat products (average soluble fiber dose range: 1.1–7.6 g/day) | 18–84 | TC: −5.9 (−8.4, −3.3) | Not reported |
| Larger reductions observed with 3 g/day in participants with TC ≥ 229 mg/dL | ||||||
| Brown (1999) [ | 25 (1600) | 48 (26–61) | Oat products (average soluble fiber dose: 5 g/day with range of 1.5–13.0 g/day) | 39 (14–84) | TC: −1.55 (−1.93, −1.16) per g | Not reported |
| LDL: −1.55 (−1.55, −1.16) per g | ||||||
| Talati (2009) [ | 8 (391) | Not reported | β-glucan from barley (7 g/day with range of 3–10 g/day) | 28–84 | TC: −13.38 (−18.46, −8.31) | Low |
| LDL: −10.02 (−14.03, −6.00) | ||||||
| TG: −11.83 (−20.12, −3.55) | ||||||
| AbuMweis (2010) [ | 11 (591) | 20–63 | Barley or β-glucan from barley (5 g/day) | 28–84 | TC: −11.60 (−15.08, −8.12) | Possible (asymmetric funnel plots) |
| LDL: −10.44 (−13.15, −7.73) | ||||||
| Tiwari (2011) [ | 20 (1154 (TC, LDL), 1000 (HDL)) | 18–72 | β-glucan (2–14 g/day) | 21–84 | TC: −23.2 (−32.9, −13.1) | Indeterminate (low risk by Eggers test, but possible risk by funnel plot) |
| LDL: −25.5(−37.1, −13.9) | ||||||
| HDL: 1.16 (−2.3, 5.03) with oat β-glucan | ||||||
| 3 g/day of β-glucan sufficient to decrease TC by 11.58 mg/dL | ||||||
| Olson (1997) [ | 12 (404) | 27–72 | Psyllium-enriched cereal products (average soluble fiber dose range: 3–12 g/day) | 14–56 | TC: −11.99 (−14.31, −9.67) | Not reported |
| LDL: −13.53 (−15.47, −11.21) | ||||||
| Brown (1999) [ | 17 (757) | 51 (44–59) | Psyllium (average soluble fiber dose 9.1 g/day with range of 4.7–16.2 g/day) | 53 (14–112) | TC: −1.5 (−1.93, −1.16) per g | Not reported |
| LDL: −2.7 (−5.8, −0.5) per g | ||||||
| Anderson (2000) [ | 8 (384) | 55 (24–82) | Psyllium (10.2 g/day) | 56–182 | TC: −9.20 (−12.69, −5.71) | Not reported |
| LDL: −10.87 (−14.04, −7.70) | ||||||
| Wei (2009) [ | 21 (1717) | Not reported | Psyllium (3–20.4 g/day) | 14–182 | TC: −14.50 (−9.94, −19.10) | Possible |
| LDL: −10.75 (−8.24, −12.06) | ||||||
| Dose response observed with 5, 10 and 15 g/day resulting in 5.6%, 9.0% and 12.5% decreases in LDL |
TC, total cholesterol; LDL, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HDL, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.