Modes of action of lipid‐lowering diets in man: studies of apolipoprotein B kinetics in relation to fat consumption and dietary fatty acid composition

C Cortese, Y Levy, ED Janus, PR Turner… - European journal of …, 1983 - Wiley Online Library
C Cortese, Y Levy, ED Janus, PR Turner, SN Rao, NE Miller, B Lewis
European journal of clinical investigation, 1983Wiley Online Library
The mechanisms by which dietary fat influences fasting plasma lipid concentrations have
been investigated in hyperlipidaemic subjects. The synthetic and fractional catabolic (FCR)
rates of the apoprotein B (apo B) of very‐low density (VLDL) and low‐density (LDL)
lipoproteins were measured using radioiodinated autologous lipoproteins. Reductions of
LDL concentration in eight subjects during low‐fat (25% of energy) diets were largely
explained by diminished synthesis (‐20%, P< 0.02), and possibly also by an increased …
Abstract
The mechanisms by which dietary fat influences fasting plasma lipid concentrations have been investigated in hyperlipidaemic subjects. The synthetic and fractional catabolic (FCR) rates of the apoprotein B (apo B) of very‐low density (VLDL) and low‐density (LDL) lipoproteins were measured using radioiodinated autologous lipoproteins.
Reductions of LDL concentration in eight subjects during low‐fat(25% of energy) diets were largely explained by diminished synthesis(‐20%, P<0.02), and possibly also by an increased FCR +15%, P= 0.05) of LDL, compared with observations made during a high‐fat (45% of energy) diet of similar fatty acid composition. VLDL apo B synthesis and FCR were not significantly altered.
When a diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids was exchanged for one high in saturated fatty acids (fat providing 45% of energy on both occasions) in four subjects, the synthetic rates of both VLDL apo B (‐31%, P<0.02) and LDL apo B (‐23%, P<0.10) were reduced while their FCRs were unchanged.
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