| Literature DB >> 25389901 |
Charlotte J Green1, Leanne Hodson2.
Abstract
Obesity is a known risk factor for the development of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD); however, it has been suggested that dietary fat, both amount and composition, may play a pivotal role in its development, independent of body fatness. Studies that have investigated the role of dietary fat on liver fat accumulation are reasonably sparse. We review here the available work that has investigated the impact of dietary fat: amount, composition and frequency, on liver fat accumulation in human observational and intervention studies. Overall, it would seem that total calorie consumption, rather than dietary fat composition, is an important factor in the development of fatty liver disease in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25389901 PMCID: PMC4245577 DOI: 10.3390/nu6115018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Overview of hepatic fatty acid metabolism in the postprandial state. Fatty acids enter a pool where they may be partitioned into oxidation (1) or esterification (2) pathways. There are TG storage and secretory pools. Fatty acids liberated from the hydrolysis of TG in the secretory TG pool, or TG particles, may then be partitioned to a storage TG pool (3). TG in the secretory pool is utilised for very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) production (4) which enters systemic circulation. It remains unclear if fatty acids liberated from the TG pools enter oxidation pathways (dotted line, (5)). Abbreviations: TG, triglyceride; VLDL, very low-density lipoprotein; DNL, de novo lipogenesis; FA, fatty acid; NEFA, non-esterified fatty acids; ApoB, apolipoprotein B; 3OHB, 3-hydroxybutyrate; ER, endoplasmic reticulum.
Overview of intervention studies that have investigated the effect of dietary fat on liver fat content.
| Ref | Subjects | Dsn | Lngt | Eng | Diet | Fat (%TE) | Measure Liver Fat | Baseline Liver Fat (%) | Change Liver Fat (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 10 F | X | 2 wk | Iso | LF | 16% Tot | MRS | 10 | ↓20 |
| BMI 33 | HF | 56% Tot | ↑35 | ||||||
| Age 43 | |||||||||
| [ | 7 M/13 F | P | 4 wk | Iso | LF, low SFA, low GI | 23% Tot | MRS | 2.2 † | ↓0.44 |
| BMI 26.9 | 7% SFA | ||||||||
| Age 69 | |||||||||
| 6 M/9 F | HF, high SFA, high GI | 43% Tot | 1.2 † | ↑0.001 | |||||
| BMI 28.1 | 24% SFA | ||||||||
| Age 69 | |||||||||
| [ | 20 M | P | 3 wk | Iso | LF | 20% Tot | MRS | 2.2 | ↓13 |
| BMI 29 | 55% Tot | ↑17 | |||||||
| Age 34 | |||||||||
| [ | 37M/8F | P | 8 wk | Iso | MUFA −ex | 42% Tot; 7% SFA; 5% PUFA; 27% MUFA −ex | MRS | 7.4 | ↓30 |
| T2D | |||||||||
| BMI 30 | MUFA +ex | 42% Tot; 7% SFA; 5% PUFA; 16% MUFA +ex | 11.6 | ↓22 | |||||
| Age 35–70 ‡ | |||||||||
| [ | 67M/F | P | 10 wk | Iso | SFA | ~42% Tot, ~20% SFA, ~4% PUFA | MRS | 3.2 | ↑8 |
| BMI 30.5 | ~39% Tot, ~10% SFA, ~13% PUFA | ↓26 | |||||||
| Age 30–65 y ‡ | |||||||||
| [ | 5 M/13 F | P | 2 wk | Hypo | LC | 34% Tot | MRS | 19 | ↓26 |
| BMI 35 | LCHO | 59% Tot | 22 | ↓55 | |||||
| Age 45 y | |||||||||
| [ | 35 M/135 F | P | 6 m | Hypo | LCHO | 30% Tot | MRS | 7.6 | ↓47 |
| BMI 32 | LF | ≤20% Tot | 9.6 | ↓42 | |||||
| Age 45 y | |||||||||
| [ | 4 M/18 F | P | 11 wk | Hypo | LF | 20% Tot | MRS | 11.2 | ↓>45 § |
| BMI 37 | 75% Tot | 12.4 | ↓>35 § | ||||||
| Age 44 y | |||||||||
| [ | 9 M/17 F | I | 7 m | Hypo | LC | 30% Tot | MRS | 10.8 | ↓28 |
| BMI 32.4 | 10% SFA | ||||||||
| 10% MUFA | |||||||||
| Age 52y | 10% PUFA | ||||||||
| [ | 39 M | P | 4 d | Hyper | HF | 60% Tot, 28% SFA | MRS | ~11 § | ↑86 |
| BMI 23 | HF/HFrc | 60% Tot, 3.5g Frc/kg FFM | ~12 § | ↑133 | |||||
| Age 24 y | |||||||||
| [ | 15 M | I | 3 d | Hyper | HEHF | 69% Tot | MRS | 2.01 | ↑112 |
| BMI 23.4 | |||||||||
| Age 25 y | |||||||||
| [ | 41 M/F | P | 7 wk | Hyper | SFA | 37% Tot, 17% SFA, 5% PUFA | MRI | 0.96 | ↑58 |
| BMI 18–27 ‡ | 40% Tot, SFA 11%, PUFA 13% | 0.75 | ↑5 | ||||||
| Age 20–38 y ‡ |
Mean data from paper unless otherwise stated. Abbreviations: Ref, reference; Dsn, design; Lngt, length of study; Eng, energy intake; %TE, percentage of total energy; M, males; F, females; BMI, body mass index (kg/m2); y, years; P, parallel; X, cross-section; I, intervention; wk, week; m, month; d, day; Iso, iso-caloric; Hypo, hypo-caloric; Hyper, hyper-caloric; LF, low fat; HF, high fat; GI, glycaemic index; T2D, type 2 diabetes; FA, saturated fat, MUFA, monounsaturated fat; PUFA, polyunsaturated fat; Tot, total; +/−, with or without; ex, exercise; MRS, magnetic resonance spectroscopy; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; ↑, increase; ↓, decrease; LC, low calorie; LCHO, low carbohydrate; HF/HFrc, high fat, high fructose; Frc, fructose; FFM, fat free mass; HEHF, high energy, high fat; † median; ‡ range; § estimated from graph.