| Literature DB >> 28854932 |
Ann G Liu1, Nikki A Ford2, Frank B Hu3, Kathleen M Zelman4, Dariush Mozaffarian5, Penny M Kris-Etherton6,7.
Abstract
Consumers are often confused about nutrition research findings and recommendations. As content experts, it is essential that nutrition scientists communicate effectively. A case-study of the history of dietary fat science and recommendations is presented, summarizing presentations from an Experimental Biology Symposium that addressed techniques for effective scientific communication and used the scientific discourse of public understanding of dietary fats and health as an example of challenges in scientific communication. Decades of dietary recommendations have focused on balancing calorie intake and energy expenditure and decreasing fat. Reducing saturated fat has been a cornerstone of dietary recommendations for cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk reduction. However, evidence from observational studies and randomized clinical trials demonstrates that replacing saturated fat with carbohydrates, specifically refined, has no benefit on CVD risk, while substituting polyunsaturated fats for either saturated fat or carbohydrate reduces risk. A significant body of research supports the unique health benefits of dietary patterns and foods that contain plant and marine sources of unsaturated fats. Yet, after decades of focus on low-fat diets, many consumers, food manufacturers, and restauranteurs remain confused about the role of dietary fats on disease risk and sources of healthy fats. Shifting dietary recommendations to focus on food-based dietary patterns would facilitate translation to the public and potentially remedy widespread misperceptions about what constitutes a healthful dietary pattern.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28854932 PMCID: PMC5577766 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-017-0271-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Current Dietary Fat Intake Recommendations for Adults
| Recommended Percent of Energy | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organization | Report | Total | Saturated | Trans | n-6 PUFA | n-3 PUFA |
| World Health Organization | Fats and fatty acids in human nutrition: report of an expert consultation [ | 20–35% | <10% | <1% | 2.5–9% | 0.5–2% |
| Food and Nutrition Board, Institute of Medicine | Dietary reference intakes for energy, carbohydrate, fiber, fat, fatty acids, cholesterol, protein, and amino acids [ | 20–35% | Limit | Limit | 5–10% | 0.6–1.2% |
| United States Department of Health and Human Services and United States Department of Agriculture | Scientific Report of the 2015 Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee [ | <10% | Limit | |||
| American Heart Association/ American College of Cardiology | Guideline on Lifestyle Management to Reduce Cardiovascular Risk, 2013 [ | 5–6% | Limit | |||
| American Diabetes Association | Standards of Medical Care in Diabetes, 2015 [ | Evidence suggests that there is not an ideal percentage of calories from carbohydrate, protein, and fat for all people with diabetes. Follow same recommendation as for the general population. | ||||
| American College of Cardiology/ American Heart Association/ The Obesity Society | Guideline for the Management of Overweight and Obesity, 2013 [ | A variety of dietary approaches can produce weight loss in overweight and obese adults as long as reduction in energy intake is achieved. Weight loss is comparable with lower-fat and higher-fat diets. | ||||
PUFA polyunsaturated fatty acids
Fig. 1Effects of isocaloric substitution of specific fatty acids for saturated fatty acids in the Nurses’ Health Study and Health Professional Follow-up Study on a.) total mortality, b.) cardiovascular disease mortality, c.) cancer mortality, d.) neurodegenerative disease mortality. Results were from the multi-variate model using the fixed-effects model. UFA indicates unsaturated fatty acid and error bard, 95% confidence intervals. Reproduced with permission from Wang, et al. 2016 [35]
Fig. 2Dose–response analysis for the curvilinear association between dietary intake of linoleic acid and coronary heart disease deaths. P = 0.72 for nonlinearity relationship, indicating a linear relationship. %E indicates percent of energy. Reproduced with permission from Farvid et al. 2014 [41]
Fig. 3Effects on CHD risk of consuming PUFA, carbohydrate, or MUFA in place of saturated fat. Predicted effects are based on changes in the total cholesterol (TC):HDL-C ratio in short-term trials (e.g., each 5% energy of PUFA replacing saturated fat lowers TC:HDL-C ratio by 0.16) coupled with observed associations between the TC:HDL-C ratio and CHD outcomes in middle-aged adults (each 1 unit lower TC:HDL-C is associated with 44% lower risk of CHD) [42]. Evidence for effects of dietary changes on actual CHD events comes from the present meta-analysis of eight randomized controlled trials for PUFA replacing saturated fat and from the Women’s Health Initiative trial for carbohydrate replacing saturated fat (n = 48,835, ~3% energy reduction in saturated fat over 8 years) [81]. Evidence for observed relationships of usual dietary habits with CHD events comes from a pooled analysis of 11 prospective cohort studies [34]. Reproduced with permission from Mozaffarian et al. 2010 [30]
Fig. 4Meta-analyses of foods and coronary heart disease, stroke, and diabetes mellitus. BMI indicates body mass index; CHD, coronary heart disease; CI, confidence interval; CVD, cardiovascular disease; PC, prospective cohort; RCT, randomized clinical trial; and RR, relative risk. Adapted with permission from Circulation [74]
Top food sources of different types of fatty acids in the diets of the U.S. population and recognized food sources
| Type of Fat | Top Sources in the Diets of the U.S Population (Contribution to Intake)a | Food Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Saturated | Regular cheese (8.5%) | Cheese |
| Pizza (5.9%) | Butter | |
| Grain-based desserts (5.8%) | Fatty cuts of meat | |
| Dairy desserts (5.6%) | Cream | |
| Chicken and chicken mixed dishes (5.5%) | Lard | |
| Sausage, franks, bacon, and ribs (4.9%) | Palm and coconut oils | |
| Burgers (4.4%) | ||
| Mexican mixed dishes (4.1%) | ||
| Oleic acid | Grain-based desserts (8.9%) | Olive oil |
| (MUFA 18:1) | Chicken and chicken mixed dishes (7.6%) | Canola oil |
| Sausage, franks, bacon, and ribs (5.9%) | Peanut oil | |
| Nuts/seeds and nut/seed mixed dishes (5.5%) | Avocados | |
| Pizza (5.4%) | Most nuts | |
| Fried white potatoes (4.9%) | ||
| Mexican mixed dishes (4.6%) | ||
| Burgers (4.1%) | ||
| n-6 fatty acids | Chicken and chicken mixed dishes (9.5%) | Safflower oil |
| (PUFA 18:2 and 20:4) | Grain-based desserts (7.4%) | Sunflower oil |
| Salad dressing (7.3%) | Soybean oil | |
| Potato/corn/other chips (6.9%) | Corn oil | |
| Nuts/seeds and nut/seed mixed dishes (6.4%) | Walnuts and walnut oil | |
| Pizza (5.3%) | ||
| Yeast breads (4.5%) | ||
| Fried white potatoes (3.5%) | ||
| α-linolenic acid | Salad dressing (10.5%) | Flaxseeds and flaxseed oil |
| (PUFA 18:3) | Chicken and chicken mixed dishes (6.4%) | Canola oil |
| Grain-based desserts (6.1%) | Soybean oil | |
| Pizza (5.8%) | Pumpkin seeds | |
| Yeast breads (5.0%) | Walnuts and walnut oil | |
| Mayonnaise (4.0%) | ||
| Pasta and pasta dishes (3.5%) | ||
| Quickbreads (3.4%) | ||
| EPA and DHA | Other fish and fish mixed dishes (53.1%) | Salmon |
| (PUFA 20:5 and 22:6) | Chicken and chicken mixed dishes (13.8%) | Herring |
| Shrimp and shrimp mixed dishes (12.9%) | Mackerel | |
| Eggs and egg mixed dishes (5.8%) | Anchovies | |
| Tuna and tuna mixed dishes (5.3%) | Sardines |
aBased on data from National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2005–2006 and analysis by the National Cancer Institute [77, 87]
EPA eicosapentaenoic acid, DHA docosahexaenoic acid, MUFA monounsaturated fatty acids, PUFA polyunsaturated fatty acids