| Literature DB >> 5785004 |
Abstract
The fecal excretion of cholesterol-4-(14)C and -sitosterol-22,23-(3)H has been studied in normal human subjects after they had ingested a single meal containing the radioactive substances. When 150 mg of -sitosterol, dispersed in the butter of a standard breakfast, was fed to 20 subjects the mean recovery of isotope in the feces was 90%. When plant sterols (70% -sitosterol, 30% campesterol) were fed together with cholesterol and used as an internal standard to correct for losses of cholesterol during intestinal transit and analytical procedures, excretion of dietary cholesterol was found to be 60-80%, irrespective of the amount fed over the range 150-1910 mg. If absorption of cholesterol is calculated from these figures, no saturation of the cholesterol absorption mechanism is indicated for the amounts of cholesterol fed in this investigation. The reason for the differences between these findings and those previously reported by other procedures is not clear, but may be related to the acute administration of a single dose of cholesterol in this study.Entities:
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Year: 1969 PMID: 5785004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Lipid Res ISSN: 0022-2275 Impact factor: 5.922