| Literature DB >> 33023065 |
Claire M Timon1, Aileen O'Connor2,3, Nupur Bhargava2,3, Eileen R Gibney2,3, Emma L Feeney2,3.
Abstract
Milk and dairy foods are naturally rich sources of a wide range of nutrients, and when consumed according to recommended intakes, contribute essential nutrients across all stages of the life cycle. Seminal studies recommendations with respect to intake of saturated fat have been consistent and clear: limit total fat intake to 30% or less of total dietary energy, with a specific recommendation for intake of saturated fat to less than 10% of total dietary energy. However, recent work has re-opened the debate on intake of saturated fat in particular, with suggestions that recommended intakes be considered not at a total fat intake within the diet, but at a food-specific level. A large body of evidence exists examining the impact of dairy consumption on markers of metabolic health, both at a total-dairy-intake level and also at a food-item level, with mixed findings to date. However the evidence suggests that the impact of saturated fat intake on health differs both across food groups and even between foods within the same food group such as dairy. The range of nutrients and bioactive components in milk and dairy foods are found in different levels and are housed within very different food structures. The interaction of the overall food structure and the nutrients describes the concept of the 'food matrix effect' which has been well-documented for dairy foods. Studies show that nutrients from different dairy food sources can have different effects on health and for this reason, they should be considered individually rather than grouped as a single food category in epidemiological research. This narrative review examines the current evidence, mainly from randomised controlled trials and meta-analyses, with respect to dairy, milk, yoghurt and cheese on aspects of metabolic health, and summarises some of the potential mechanisms for these findings.Entities:
Keywords: composition; dairy; health; matrix; metabolism; nutrient; saturated fats
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33023065 PMCID: PMC7601440 DOI: 10.3390/nu12103040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Nutrient content and associated health benefits of dairy consumption.
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) demonstrating an effect of overall dairy consumption on markers of metabolic health and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.
| Author | Country | Study Design | Population | Age (Years) | Intervention | Duration | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vasilopoulou et al. 2020 [ | UK | Crossover | 25–70 | 2 arm: | Two 12-week periods separated by an 8-week washout period | No significant change from baseline in serum total cholesterol (TC) between diets. Group | |
| Markey et al. 2017 [ | UK | Crossover | 25–70 | 2 arm: | Two 12-week periods, separated by an 8-week washout period | Group | |
| Rosqvist et al. 2015 [ | Sweden | Parallel | 20–70 | 2 arm: | 8 weeks | Control diet increased TC, LDL, apolipoprotein B:apolipoprotein A-I ratio and non-HDL plasma lipids, whereas the MFGM diet did not. HDL, triglyceride, sitosterol, lathosterol, campesterol and proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 concentrations and fatty acid compositions did not differ between groups. | |
| Benatar et al. 2013 [ | New Zealand | Parallel | >18 | 3 arm: | 1 month | No significant change in LDL or HDL, triglycerides, systolic or diastolic BP, C-reactive protein, glucose or insulin across groups. There was a small increase in weight in group | |
| Nestel et al. 2013 [ | Australia | Crossover | 40–70 | 3 arm: | Two 3-week periods, for group B + C (full fat diets). Group A diet (low fat) was consumed twice—between and at the end of the full-fat dairy dietary periods, for a duration of 2 weeks. | Lowest LDL and HDL concentrations were observed in group | |
| Crichton et al. 2012 [ | Australia | Crossover | 18–75 | 2 arm: | Two 6-month periods, no washout period | No significant changes in resting metabolic rate or total energy expenditure, systolic and diastolic BP, fasting blood glucose, TC, HDL or LDL, triglycerides or | |
| Palacios et al. 2011 [ | Puerto Rico | Parallel | 22–50 | 3 arm: | 21 weeks | No significant group effects were observed for anthropometric measurements or serum lipids such as TC, HDL, LDL and TAG levels. Although TAG levels decreased by 18% in group | |
| Stancliffe et al. 2011 [ | USA | Parallel | 37.0 ± 9.9 | 2 arm: | 12 weeks | Group | |
| van Meijl and Mensink, 2010 [ | Netherlands | Crossover | 18–70 | 2 arm: | Two 8-week periods separated by a 2-week washout period | Plasma concentrations of TNF-a decreased, and soluble TNF-a receptor-1 increased after low-fat dairy consumption compared to the control. s-TNFR-2 also increased. Low-fat dairy consumption had no effect on IL-6, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, intracellular adhesion molecule-1 and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 concentrations. Lipid profiles were not analysed. | |
| Zemel et al. 2010 [ | USA | Crossover | Average—31 ± 10.3 | 2 arm: | Two 4-week periods separated by a 4-week washout period | Group | |
| Wennersberg et al. 2009 [ | Norway | Parallel | 30–65 | 2 arm: | 6 months | No significant differences between changes in body weight or body composition, BP, markers of inflammation, endothelial function, adiponectin or oxidative stress in group | |
| van Meijl and Mensink, 2009 [ | Netherlands | Crossover | 18–70 | 2 arm: | Two 8-week periods separated by a 2-week washout period | In group | |
| Tricon et al. 2006 [ | UK | Crossover | 34–60 | 2 arm: | Two 6 week periods, separated by a 7 week washout period | Diet | |
| Zemel et al. 2005 [ | America | Parallel | 26–55 | 24 weeks (both studies) | |||
| Tholstrup et al. 2004 [ | Denmark | Crossover | 20–31 | 3 arms: | Three 3-week periods separated by a 4-week washout period | Fasting LDL concentrations were significantly higher after butter than cheese diet, with a borderline significant difference in TC after the experimental periods. Postprandial glucose showed a higher response after cheese diet compared to milk diet. No differences were found between groups for HDL, Very Low-Density Lipoprotein (VLDL), apo A-1 and apo B concentrations. |
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) demonstrating an effect of cheese consumption on markers of metabolic health and CVD risk.
| Author | Country | Study Design | Population | Age (Years) | Intervention | Duration | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feeney et al. 2018 [ | Ireland | Parallel | >50 | 4 arm: | 6 weeks | There was a significant difference in total cholesterol (TC) and LDL between groups. Group | |
| Limongi et al. 2018 [ | Italy | Crossover | >60 | 2 arm: | Two 2-month periods, separated by 1-month washout period | No significant differences found in relation to LDL between diet | |
| Brassard et al. 2017 [ | Canada | Crossover | 18–65 | 5 arm: | Five 4-week periods, separated by 4-week washout periods | No changes were evident in HDL after cheese consumption. LDL was lower in group | |
| Raziani et al. 2016 [ | Denmark | Parallel | 18–70 | 3 arm: | 12 weeks | No differences were evident on lipid profile between groups. In addition, Insulin, glucose, and triacylglycerol concentrations as well as blood pressure and waist circumference did not differ. | |
| Thorning et al. 2015 [ | Denmark | Crossover | 45–68 | 3 arm: | Three 2-week periods, separated by 2-week washout periods | Group | |
| Nilsen et al. 2015 [ | Norway | Parallel | >18 | 3 arm: | 8 weeks | There were no changes in MetS (metabolic equivalents) factors between the intervention groups and control. Significant reductions were noted for TC in those with MetS in group | |
| Soerensen et al. 2014 [ | Denmark | Crossover | 18–50 | 3 arm: | Three 2-week periods, separated by 2-week washout period | Significantly lower increases in TC and LDL were found in the group | |
| Hjerpsted et al. 2011 [ | Denmark | Crossover | 22–69 | Test-food amounts were dependent on participants’ energy levels. 2 arm: | Two 6-week periods, separated by 2-week washout period | Group | |
| Intorre et al. 2011 [ | Italy | Crossover | 20–40 | 2 arm: | Two 4-week periods, separated by a 4-week washout | The blood lipid profile did not change after diet | |
| Pintus et al. 2013 [ | Italy | Crossover | 30–60 | 2 arm: | Two 3-week periods, separated by a 6-week washout | The findings confirmed an association between anandamide and adiposity. Diet | |
| Sofi et al. 2010 [ | Italy | Crossover | 30–65 | 2 arm: | Two 10-week periods, separated by a 10-week washout period | Consumption of cheese naturally rich in CLA determined a significant reduction in some inflammatory parameters as well as some haemorheological, appearing to cause favourable biochemical changes of atherosclerotic markers, albeit limited. No significant effects on lipid profile were evident. | |
| Nestel et al. 2005 [ | Australia | Crossover | Average— | 2 arm: | Two 4-week periods, separated by a 2-week washout period | Lipid values did not differ significantly between the group | |
| Biong et al. 2004 [ | Norway | Crossover | 21–54 | 3 arm: | Three 3-week periods, separated by a 1-week washout periods | TC was significantly lower after diet | |
| Karvonen et al. 2002 [ | Finland | Crossover | 25–65 | 2 arm: | Two 4-week periods, washout period not specified | Serum TC and LDL concentration was lower in group |
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) demonstrating an effect of milk consumption on markers of metabolic health and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.
| Author | Country | Study Design | Population | Age (Years) | Intervention | Duration | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lee et al. 2016 [ | Korea | Parallel | 35–65 | 2 arm: | 6 weeks | No significant differences in body mass index, blood pressure, lipid profile and adiponectin levels, as well as levels of inflammatory markers, oxidative stress markers and atherogenic markers were found between groups. | |
| Hidaka et al. 2012 [ | Japan | Parallel | Mean: 28.6 ± 6.0 S.D | 2 arm: | 4 weeks | Group | |
| Rosado et al. 2011 [ | Mexico | Parallel | 25–45 | 3 arm: | 16 weeks | Group | |
| Venkatramanan et al. 2010 [ | Canada | Crossover | 30–60 | 3 arm: | Three 8-week periods separated by 4-week washout periods | Group | |
| Faghih et al. 2009 [ | Iran | Parallel | 20–50 | 4 arm: | 8 weeks | Body weight, BMI, waist circumference (WC), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), body fat mass and percent body fat decreased significantly across all groups. The changes in WC and WHR were significantly higher in groups | |
| Gardner et al. 2007 [ | USA | Crossover | 30–65 | 3 arm: 32 oz/d whole soy bean drink. | Three 4-week periods, separated by 4-week washout periods | LDL was significantly lower after consuming soy milk in groups | |
| Barr et al. 2000 [ | USA | Parallel | 55–85 | 2 arm: | 12 weeks | Similar decreases in blood pressure were apparent across both groups. TC, LDL and the ratio of TC:HDL remained unchanged. Triglyceride levels increased within the normal range in group |
Randomised controlled trials (RCT) demonstrating an effect of yoghurt consumption on markers of metabolic health and CVD risk.
| Author | Country | Study Design | Population | Age (Years) | Intervention | Duration | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Crossover | 20–30 | 5 arm: | Postprandial | Pre-meal glucose responses were dose-dependent to increasing | ||
| Iran | Parallel | 29–67 | 2 arm: | 12 weeks | Diet | ||
| Iran | Parallel | 19–49 | 3 arm: | 6 weeks | No significant difference in lipid profile within any group. No difference in TAG and LDL across the groups. There was a decrease in cholesterol in both group A + B compared with the control as well as a decrease in TC:HDL ratio. HDL increased in group A compared with the control. | ||
| Iran | Parallel | 30–60 | 2 arm: | 6 weeks | Diet | ||
| Iran | Crossover | 40–64 | 2 arm: | two 6-week periods, separated by a 4-week washout period | Consumption of diet | ||
| Germany | Crossover | 19–56 | 2 arm: | 6 weeks (all on control diet), followed by two 6-week periods, separated by a 9-day washout periods. | Serum TC and LDL concentrations were not influenced by diet A. The HDL concentration increased significantly after diet | ||
| France | Crossover | 20–60 | 2 arm: | Two 15-day periods, separated by a 15-day washout period | No changes detected in fasting plasma glucose, insulin, fatty acid, TAG or cholesterol concentrations in both groups. Plasma butyrate was higher and plasma propionate tended to be higher in subjects without lactose malabsorption after diet | ||
| Denmark | Parallel | 18–55 | 5 arm: | 8 weeks | Comparing all 5 groups, no statistical effects on LDL were observed after consumption of diet D. After adjusting for small changes in body weight, LDL decreased by 8.4% and fibrinogen increased. This was significantly different from the control groups, | ||
| USA | Study 1: single-blind, parallel. Study 2: double-blind, crossover. | Study 1: | 49–55 | Study 1: 3 weeks Study 2: Two 4-week periods with a 2-week washout period | Study 1: Diet |
Figure 2Boxplot showing average fat and mineral content in dairy products per 100 g. Values from the Composition of Foods Integrated Dataset (CoFID). Only plain, unflavoured products with no added sugar were included in this analysis. Nutrients shown are: (A) total fat (g), (B) calcium (mg), (C) magnesium (mg) and (D) phosphorus (mg), calculated from n = 4 butter, n = 43 cheese, n = 8 cream, n = 20 milk and n = 4 yoghurt samples.