| Literature DB >> 23731447 |
Lin Lin1, Hanja Allemekinders, Angela Dansby, Lisa Campbell, Shaunda Durance-Tod, Alvin Berger, Peter J H Jones.
Abstract
Canola oil-based diets have been shown to reduce plasma cholesterol levels in comparison with diets containing higher levels of saturated fatty acids. Consumption of canola oil also influences biological functions that affect various other biomarkers of disease risk. Previous reviews have focused on the health effects of individual components of canola oil. Here, the objective is to address the health effects of intact canola oil, as this has immediate practical implications for consumers, nutritionists, and others deciding which oil to consume or recommend. A literature search was conducted to examine the effects of canola oil consumption on coronary heart disease, insulin sensitivity, lipid peroxidation, inflammation, energy metabolism, and cancer cell growth. Data reveal substantial reductions in total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, as well as other positive actions, including increased tocopherol levels and improved insulin sensitivity, compared with consumption of other dietary fat sources. In summary, growing scientific evidence supports the use of canola oil, beyond its beneficial actions on circulating lipid levels, as a health-promoting component of the diet.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23731447 PMCID: PMC3746113 DOI: 10.1111/nure.12033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Rev ISSN: 0029-6643 Impact factor: 7.110
Figure 1Flow diagram of article screening process for the present review.
Summary of studies investigating circulating blood lipid profiles with different types of diets
| Reference | Study design | Canola oil treatment | Control diet | Duration of exposure | Participants | Baseline status (mmol/L) | Magnitude of effect (%)a | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baudet et al. (1988) | R, C, CRO | 15.6 E% CO | 15.6 E% milk fat | 6 weeks | Females, 26–49 years, | TC = 5.38 LDL = 3.54 HDL = 1.78 TAG = 0.86 | TC ↓ 18.4% LDL↓ 24.9% HDL ↑ 1.7% TAG ↓ 4.7% | |
| Corboy et al. (1993) | C | 30 g CO mix into 135 g muesli | Baseline normal diet | 4 weeks | Male, 20–65 years, | TC = 4.57 ± 1.09 LDL = 2.90 ± 0.90 HDL = 1.13 ± 0.17 TAG = 0.94 ± 0.36 | TC ↓10.5% LDL↓10.7% HDL↑ 1.8% TAG↓ 6.4% | |
| Gillingham et al. (2011) | R, SB, CRO | 24.5 E% high-oleic CO | 1) 24.5 E% provided by a blend of oils typical of a Western diet 2) 24.5 E% flaxseed and high-oleic CO | 4 weeks | Males and females, 18–65 years, | TC = 5.94 ± 1.03 LDL = 3.70 ± 0.95 HDL = 1.41 ± 0.35 TAG = 1.84 ± 1.09 | 1) TC↓6.7% LDL↓12.2% HDL↓ 2.9% TAG↑12.9% 2) TC↑2.8% LDL↑0.6% HDL↑3.76 TAG ↑ 10.3% | 1) |
| Gulesserian et al. (2002) | Not applicable | Avg. 15 g/day CO during first 2 months, avg. 22 g/day CO during last 3 months | Baseline habitual diet | 5 months | Males and females, 4–19 years, | TC = 6.03 LDL = 3.90 HDL = 1.53 TAG = 2.04 | TC ↓ 8.6% LDL ↓ 6.0% HDL ↓ 3.4% TAG ↓ 28.8% | |
| Gustafsson et al. (1994) | R, C, P | ∼30 E% fat, mainly RO | Baseline: Swedish diet, 37 E% fat, 16 E% SFA | 3 weeks | Males and females, avg. 48.2 ± 6.9 years, | TC = 6.79 ± 1.46 LDL = 4.85 ± 1.24 HDL = 1.12 ± 0.27 TAG = 2.08 ± 0.80 | TC ↓ 15.5% LDL ↓ 19.6% HDL ↓ 10.7% TAG ↓ 13.5% | |
| Hodson et al. (2001) | R, CRO | 29 g/day CO and CO margarine, 28.9% of total fat intake | High-SFA diet: 34 E% fat, 17.7 E% SFA | 2.5 weeks | Males and females, avg. 23.0 ± 4.2 years, | TC ≤ 6.5 | TC ↓ 11.6% LDL ↓ 14.8% HDL ↓ 4.1% TAG ↓ 15.0% | |
| Iggman et al. (2011) | R, CRO | CO diet, 35 E% fat: CO-based margarine | Dairy fat diet, 35 E% fat: butter, cream and high-fat cheese | 3 weeks | Males and females, 25–68 years, | TC = 6.70 ± 1.20 LDL = 4.76 ± 1.13 HDL = 0.98 ± 0.31 TAG = 2.21 ± 1.19 | TC ↓ 16.1% LDL ↓ 19.6% HDL ↑ 1.0 TAG ↓ 12.8 | |
| Junker et al (2001) | R, C | 38.4 E% RO diet; 19 E% MUFA | Wash-in diet 38 E% 19 E% SFA | 4 weeks | Males average 25 years, | TC = 4.58 ± 0.78 LDL = 2.53 ± 0.79 HDL = 1.66 ± 0.54 TAG = 0.78 | TC ↓14% LDL ↓ 18% HDL ↓ 12% TAG ↑ 5% | |
| Karvonen et al. (2002) | R, C, SB, CRO | 11 g/day CO in 65 g cheese (11 g fat/1 g SFA) | 65 g/day milk fat cheese (15 g fat/10 g SFA) | 4 weeks | Males and females, 25–65 years, | TC = 6.13 ± 0.59 LDL = 4.17 ± 0.56 HDL = 1.34 ± 0.35 TAG = 1.36 ± 0.48 | TC ↓ 5.1% LDL ↓ 6.4% HDL ↓ 3.0% TAG ↔ 0% | |
| Lichtenstein et al. (1993) | R, C, DB, CRO | 20 E% CO (30 E% fat, <7 E% SFA) | 1) Baseline: Western diet, 36 E% fat, 15 E% SFA 2) Corn oil 3) OO | 32 days (∼5 weeks) | Males and females, 44–78 years, | TC = 5.72 LDL = 3.93 HDL = 1.24 TAG = 1.21 | 1) TC ↓ 12.2% LDL ↓ 17.0% HDL ↓ 8.0% TAG ↑ 1.7% 2) TC ↔ 0% LDL ↑ 0.8% HDL ↔ 0% TAG ↑ 0.9% 3) TC ↓ 5.4% LDL ↓ 4.5% HDL ↓ 4.3% TAG ↓ 2.7% | 1) |
| Matheson et al. (1996) | C, CRO | Avg. 16.6 g/day CO margarine and 13.5 g/day CO (= 29.5% of total fat intake) | Control diet: butter, margarine, vegetable oils | 13 weeks | Males and females, 25–50 years, | TC = 5.82 ± 0.68 LDL = 4.41 ± 1.09 HDL = 1.07 ± 0.25 TAG = 1.73 ± 0.62 | TC ↓ 7.0% LDL ↓ 10.0% HDL ↑ 6.0% TAG ↑ 20.0% | |
| McDonald et al. (1989) | R, C, CRO | 28 E% CO | Baseline (7 days): Western diet 36% fat | 18 days | Males, 19–32 years, | TC = 4.48 LDL = 2.98 HDL = 1.41 TAG = 1.03 | TC ↓ 20.1% LDL ↓ 25.2% HDL ↓ 10.6% TAG ↓ 20.4% | |
| McKenney et al. (1995) | R, C, DB, CRO | 42.6 g/day CO in cookies | 42.0 g/day coconut oil in cookies | 6 weeks | Males and females, 47–79 years, | TC = 5.75 LDL = 3.85 HDL = 1.29 TAG = 1.32 | TC ↓ 8.7% LDL ↓ 11.1% HDL ↓ 4.1% TAG ↑ 1.1% | |
| McKenney et al. (1995) | R, C, DB, CRO | 42.6 g/day CO in cookies | 42.0 g/day coconut oil in cookies | 6 weeks | Males and females, 39–63 years, | TC = 5.53 LDL = 3.58 HDL = 1.32 TAG = 1.38 Lovastatin | TC ↓ 4.6% LDL ↓ 5.2% HDL ↓ 5.2% TAG ↓ 0.5% | NS NS Not reported Not reported |
| Miettinen and Vanhanen (1994) | R, DB | 50 g/day of CO mayonnaise | Baseline habitual diet | 6 weeks | Males, avg. 50 ± 3 years, | TC = 7.1 ± 0.1 LDL = 4.5 ± 0.1 HDL = 1.3 ± 0.1 TAG = 1.8 ± 0.2 | TC ↓ 9% LDL ↓ 10% HDL ↑ 9% TAG ↓ 19% | |
| Mutalib et al. (1995) | R, C | 26 E% hydrogenated RO | Palm oil | 8 weeks | Males, age range: unknown | Overall average: TC = 4.60 LDL = 3.01 HDL = 1.14 TAG = 1.12 | 1) TC ↓ 21% LDL ↓ 32% HDL ↑3% TAG ↑ 3% | |
| Nielsen et al. (2002) | R, DB, CRO | 19 E% CO | 1) 19 E% OO 2) 19 E% SO | 3 weeks | Males, 20–28 years avg. 23.9 years, | TC = 4.71 HDL = 1.09 TAG = 1.2 | 1) TC ↓ 14.0% LDL ↓ 19.4% HDL ↓ 0.1% TAG ↓ 13.9% 2) TC ↑ 3.3% LDL ↓ 5.6% HDL ↑ 2.8% TAG ↑ 1.5% | 1) |
| Noakes and Clifton (1998) | R, C, CRO | 1) 15 E% TFA-free CO 2) 15 E% TFA CO | 20 E% butter | 3 weeks | Males and females, 41–66 years, | TC = 5.71 ± 0.23 LDL = 3.89 ± 0.18 HDL = 1.17 ± 0.08 TAG = 1.43 ± 0.11 | 1) TC ↓ 8.4% LDL ↓ 13.6% HDL ↑ 6.7% TAG ↓ 5.6% 2) TC ↓ 8.4% LDL ↓ 12.1% HDL ↓ 0.8% TAG ↓ 4.4% | 1) |
| Nydahl et al. (1994) | DB, CRO | Dietary fat mainly from RO | 1) Baseline habitual diet 2) SO diet | 3 weeks | Males and females, avg. 29.2 ± 12.0 years, | TC = 4.79 ± 0.98 LDL = 3.24 ± 0.89 HDL = 1.24 ± 0.27 TAG = 1.02 ± 0.45 | 1) TC ↓ 4.0% LDL ↓ 4.9% HDL ↑ 1.6% TAG ↓ 3.9% 2) TC ↑ 0.4% LDL ↑ 2.0% HDL ↑ 2.4% TAG ↔ 0% | 1) |
| Palomäki et al. (2010) | R, CRO | ∼11–12 E% (35 mL/day) cold-pressed turnip LEAR oil | ∼11–12 E% butter (37.5 g/day) | 6–8 weeks | Males, 30–65 years, | TC = 5.15 ± 1.49 LDL = 3.33 ± 1.25 HDL = 1.15 ± 0.27 TAG = 2.19 ± 1.13 | TC ↓ 8.3% LDL ↓ 10.4% HDL ↔ 0% TAG ↓ 5.9% | |
| Pedersen et al. (2000) | R, DB, CRO | 19 E% CO | 1) 19 E% OO 2) 19 E% SO | 3 weeks | Males, 20–28 years, | TC = 4.74 HDL = 1.10 TAG = 1.2 | 1) TC ↓ 11.6% LDL ↓ 19.9% HDL ↑ 1.0% TAG ↑ 15.1% 2) TC ↓ 1.9% LDL ↓ 8.5% HDL ↑ 8.8% TAG ↑ 1.3% | 1) |
| Sarkkinen et al. (1998) | R, C, SB, P | RO and RO-based margarine, 33 E% fat | 1) Baseline habitual diet 2) High-SFA diet ( | 6 months | Males and females, 23–58 years, | TC = 6.54 ± 1.12 LDL = 4.55 ± 0.95 HDL = 1.35 ± 0.28 TAG = 1.55 ± 0.94 | 1) TC ↓ 3.7% LDL ↓ 6.6% HDL ↑ 2.2% TAG ↓ 9.7% 2) TC ↓ 3.5% LDL ↓ 3.0% HDL ↓ 10.4% TAG ↑ 2.9% | 1) NS |
| Seppänen-Laakso et al. (1992) | C, P | 1) Avg. 7 E% RO (18 g/day) 2) Avg. 8 E% RO margarine (23 g/day) | Baseline habitual diet: avg. 7–8 E% butter | 6 weeks | Males and females, avg. 43 years, | TC = 6.32 ± 0.18 LDL = 4.39 ± 0.18 HDL = 1.47 ± 0.10 TAG = 0.99 ± 0.09 | 1) TC ↓ 3.0% LDL ↓ 6.4% HDL ↓ 2.0% TAG ↑ 16.2% 2) TC ↓ 1.3% LDL ↓ 3.3% HDL ↑ 0.7% TAG ↑ 14.1% | 1) NS |
| Seppänen-Laakso et al. (1993) | C, P | Avg. 6 E% RO (15% of total fat intake) | Baseline habitual diet: avg. 6 E% margarine | 6 weeks | Males and females, 45.5 ± 2.0 years, | TC = 6.07 ± 0.14 LDL = 4.13 ± 0.14 HDL = 1.33 ± 0.05 TAG = 1.34 ± 0.12 | TC ↓ 4.8% LDL ↓ 6.5% HDL ↑ 3.0% TAG ↓ 9.0% | NS NS NS NS |
| Södergren et al. (2001) | R, C, SB, CRO | ∼28 E% RO-based fat products | ∼28 E% SFA products | 4 weeks | Males and females, avg. 50 ± 8 years, | TC = 6.59 ± 1.02 LDL = 4.31 ± 0.94 HDL = 1.55 ± 0.40 TAG = 1.40 ± 0.61 | TC ↓ 3.3% LDL ↓ 11.1% HDL ↑ 22.6% TAG ↓ 13.3 | |
| Stricker et al. (2008) | R, DB, P | 2 tablespoons/day CO | Baseline habitual diet | 8 weeks | Males and females, avg. 66.8 ± 8.1 years, | TC = 4.73 ± 0.9 LDL = 2.74 ± 0.73 HDL = 1.44 ± 0.32 TAG = 1.44 ± 0.55 | TC ↓ 6.6% LDL ↓ 11.3% HDL ↑ 1.4% TAG ↓ 2.3% | |
| Sundram et al. (1995) | R, C, DB, CRO | ∼20 E% CO | ∼20 E% palm olein | 4 weeks | Males, 19–24 years, | TC = 4.46 ± 0.64 LDL = 2.64 ± 0.51 HDL = 1.18 ± 0.26 TAG = 0.94 ± 0.36 | TC ↓ 2.2% LDL ↓ 4.5% HDL ↔ 0% TAG ↑ 9.6% | NS NS NS NS |
| Uusitupa et al. (1994) | R, C, CRO | LEAR oil-based margarine as main fat source, 40 E% fat, 10 E% SFA | High-SFA diet, 40 E% fat, 20 E% SFA, butter main fat source | 3 weeks | Females, avg. 23 ± 1.6 years, | TC = 5.21 ± 0.92 TAG = 0.76 ± 0.21 | TC ↓ 21.7% LDL ↓ 29.4% HDL ↓ 1.9% TAG ↑ 7.7% | |
| Valsta et al. (1992) | DB, CRO | 63% of MUFA from LEAR oil (∼10 E%) | 1) Baseline (2 wk): 18.9 E% SFA 2) SO diet: 87% of PUFA from SO (∼12 E%) | 3 weeks | Males and females, 18–65 years, | TC = 5.35 ± 0.98 LDL = 3.17 ± 0.82 HDL = 1.33 ± 0.28 TAG = 0.88 ± 0.37 | 1) TC ↓ 15.5% LDL ↓ 24.0% HDL ↑ 0.8% TAG ↓ 3.4% 2) TC ↓ 2.2% LDL ↓ 6.6% HDL ↔ 0% TAG ↑ 7.6% | 1) |
| Vega-López et al. (2006) | R, C, DB, CRO | ∼13 E% CO (2/3 of total fat intake) | ∼13 E% palm oil (2/3 of total fat intake) | 35 days (5 weeks) | Males and females, ≥50 years, | TC = 6.54 LDL = 4.58 HDL = 1.40 TAG = 1.25 | TC ↓ 12.5% LDL ↓ 14.2% HDL ↓ 3.6% TAG ↔ 0% | |
| Wardlaw et al. (1990) | R, C, SB, P | >31.2 E% CO, 39 E% fat | Baseline (3 wk, | 8 weeks | Males, 21–47 years, | TC = 5.36 ± 0.15 LDL = 3.64 ± 0.15 HDL = 1.12 ± 0.05 TAG = 1.47 ± 0.16 | TC ↓ 8.8% LDL ↓ 11.1 HDL ↑ 0.9% TAG ↓ 7.9% |
Magnitude of effect (%)a of TC/LDL/HDL/TG = (canola oil treatment-control diet)/control diet *100%.
Abbreviations and symbols: ↓, decrease; ↑, increase; ↔, no change; C, control group; CO, canola oil; CRO, crossover; DB, double blind; E%, percentage of total energy intake; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; LEAR, low-erucic acid rapeseed; MUFA, monounsaturated fatty acids; NS, non-significant; OO, olive oil; P, parallel; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acids; R, randomized; RO, rapeseed oil; SB, single blind; SFA, saturated fatty acids; SO, sunflower oil; TAG, triacylglycerol; TC, total cholesterol; TFA, trans fatty acid.
Summary of studies investigating biomarkers of antioxidants, hemostasis, lipid peroxidation, and inflammation with different types of diets
| Biomarker | Control diet | Effect of canola/LEAR oil | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antioxidants | |||
| α-tocopherol | Baseline SFA diet | Increase | Gustafsson et al. (1994) |
| SO diet | No change | Gustafsson et al. (1994) | |
| SFA diet | No change | Södergren et al. (2001) | |
| γ-tocopherol | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Gustafsson et al. (1994) |
| SO diet | Increase | Gustafsson et al. (1994) | |
| SFA diet | Increase | Södergren et al. (2001) | |
| Hemostasis | |||
| Platelet aggregation | Safflower diet | No change | Kwon et al. (1991) |
| Baseline SFA diet | Decrease | Kwon et al. (1991) | |
| Collagen-induced platelet aggregation | High-SFA diet/SO diet | No change | McDonald et al. (1989) |
| Thromboxane B2 | SO, OO, and FO/SO and OO/soybean oil diets | No change | Chan et al. (1993) |
| Safflower oil diet | No change | Kwon et al. (1991) | |
| High-SFA diet | No change | McDonald et al. (1989) | |
| 11-dehydro-thromboxane B2 | SFA diet | No change | Södergren et al. (2001) |
| 6-keto prostaglandin1α | SO, OO, and FO/SO and OO/soybean oil diets | No change | Chan et al. (1993) |
| High-SFA diet | Increase | McDonald et al. (1989) | |
| Factor VII coagulant activity (FVIIa) | Baseline habitual diet | Decrease | Iggman et al. (2011) |
| Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) | |
| Coagulation factor VIIc (FVllc) | Baseline habitual diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Coagulation factor XII (FXIIc) | Baseline habitual diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Coagulation factor XIIa (FXIIa) | Baseline habitual diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 | Dairy fat diet | No change | Iggman et al. (2011) |
| Fibrinogen | Dairy fat diet | No change | Iggman et al. (2011) |
| Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) | |
| Pathromtin SL (FIXc) | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Pathromtin SL (FXc) | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Pathromtin SL (Fllc) | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Pathromtin fragment (F1+2) | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Procoagulant activity | Control diet | No change | Mendez et al. (1996) |
| ATP secretion | Baseline SFA diet | Decrease | Kwon et al. (1991) |
| Bleeding time | SO, OO, and FO/SO and OO/soybean oil diets | No change | Chan et al. (1993) |
| Mixed-fat SFA diet | Increase | McDonald et al. (1989) | |
| Lipid peroxidation | |||
| 8-iso prostaglandin2α | SFA diet | No change | Södergren et al. (2001) |
| Conjugated dienes | Palm oil | Decrease | Mutalib et al. (1995) |
| Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances | Palm oil | No change | Mutalib et al. (1995) |
| Glutathione peroxidase activity | Palm oil | Decrease | Mutalib et al. (1995) |
| Erythrocyte superoxide dismutase activity | Palm oil | Decrease | Mutalib et al. (1995) |
| Hydroperoxides | SFA diet | No change | Södergren et al. (2001) |
| Malondialdehyde | SFA diet | No change | Södergren et al. (2001) |
| Inflammation | |||
| C-reactive protein | High-oleic CO and FO/high-SFA diets | No change | Gillingham et al. (2011) |
| Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) | |
| Interleukin-6 | High-oleic CO and FO/high-SFA diets | No change | Gillingham et al. (2011) |
| Cream/OO/potato/All-Bran diets | No change | Manning et al. (2008) | |
| sVCAM-1 | High-oleic CO and FO/high-SFA diets | No change | Gillingham et al. (2011) |
| sICAM-1 | High-oleic CO and FO/high-SFA diets | No change | Gillingham et al. (2011) |
| Soluble E-selectin | High-oleic CO and FO/high-SFA diets | No change | Gillingham et al. (2011) |
| P-selectin | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| L-selectin | Baseline SFA diet | No change | Junker et al. (2001) |
| Tumor necrosis factor | Diet without CO, arginine, and certain trace elements | Improved | Mendez et al. (1996) |
| Tumor necrosis factor-α | Cream/OO/potato/All-Bran diets | No change | Manning et al. (2008) |
| Interleukin-8 | Cream/OO/potato/All-Bran diets | No change | Manning et al. (2008) |
| Prostaglandin E2 | Diet without CO, arginine, and certain trace elements | Increase | Mendez et al. (1996) |
| Cortisol | Cream/OO/potato/All-Bran diets | No change | Manning et al. (2008) |
| Neutrophil oxidative burst | Diet without CO, arginine, and certain trace elements | No change | Mendez et al. (1996) |
| Lymphocyte proliferation | Diet without CO, arginine, and certain trace elements | No change | Mendez et al. (1996) |
Abbreviations: CO, canola oil; FO, flaxseed oil; OO, olive oil; SFA, saturated fatty acids; sICAM-1, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1; SO, sunflower oil;VCAM-1, soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule.
Figure 2Evidence of the effect of canola oil on health-related risk factors.