McNamara D J
Department of Nutrition and Food Science, University of Arizona, Tucson 85721.
Adv Food Nutr Res. 1992;36:253-351. doi: 10.1016/s1043-4526(08)60107-2.
Dietary fat quality and quantity significantly affect the metabolism of all the plasma lipoproteins and probably constitute the most significant dietary determinants of plasma lipoprotein levels. Since the major role of the plasma lipoproteins is the transport of exogenous and endogenous fat, this would be expected of a highly regulated, metabolically homeostatic system. The data clearly show that dietary fat saturation affects all aspects of lipoprotein metabolism, from synthesis to intravascular remodeling and exchanges to receptor-mediated and nonspecific catabolism. The experimental data regarding dietary fatty acid effects on lipoprotein metabolism are complicated and at times contradictory due to the large degree of metabolic heterogeneity in the population, which, when coupled with the known abnormalities of lipoprotein metabolism associated with certain types of hyperlipoproteinemia, can present responses from A to Z. It is clear that the same dietary pattern has different effects in different individuals and that complicating factors of individuality raise some concerns regarding generalized dietary recommendations. As new knowledge of the role of dietary factors and CVD risk develops, and our abilities to characterize the individual patient's response to dietary interventions become more refined, it may be possible to specify dietary fat intervention from a patient-oriented concept rather than a single all-purpose diet approach. Thus it would be possible to design dietary interventions to match patient needs and gain both efficacy and compliance. With the spectrum of approaches possible--low fat, moderate fat with MUFA, n-3 PUFA, etc.--we should be able to approach dietary interventions to reduce CVD risk at both a population-based level and a patient-specific level. There remains much to learn regarding the effects of dietary fatty acids on the synthesis, intravascular modifications, and eventual catabolism of the plasma lipoproteins. The area of lipoprotein metabolism in health and disease, of its modifications by diets and drugs, and of the contributions of genetic heterogeneity to these processes is one of notable advances over the past two decades and continues to be an area of intense investigation.
膳食脂肪的质量和数量会显著影响所有血浆脂蛋白的代谢,并且可能是血浆脂蛋白水平最重要的膳食决定因素。由于血浆脂蛋白的主要作用是运输外源性和内源性脂肪,所以这对于一个高度调控、代谢稳态的系统来说是可以预期的。数据清楚地表明,膳食脂肪饱和度会影响脂蛋白代谢的各个方面,从合成到血管内重塑与交换,再到受体介导和非特异性分解代谢。关于膳食脂肪酸对脂蛋白代谢影响的实验数据很复杂,而且有时相互矛盾,这是因为人群中存在很大程度的代谢异质性,再加上与某些类型的高脂蛋白血症相关的已知脂蛋白代谢异常,可能会出现从A到Z的各种反应。很明显,相同的饮食模式在不同个体中会产生不同的影响,而且个体差异的复杂因素引发了人们对一般性饮食建议的一些担忧。随着对膳食因素作用和心血管疾病风险的新知识不断发展,以及我们对个体患者对饮食干预反应的特征化能力变得更加精细,或许有可能从以患者为导向的概念出发来指定膳食脂肪干预措施,而不是采用单一的通用饮食方法。这样就有可能设计出符合患者需求的饮食干预措施,从而提高疗效和依从性。有了一系列可行的方法——低脂、含单不饱和脂肪酸的适度脂肪、n-3多不饱和脂肪酸等——我们应该能够在基于人群的层面和针对特定患者的层面上采取饮食干预措施来降低心血管疾病风险。关于膳食脂肪酸对血浆脂蛋白的合成、血管内修饰以及最终分解代谢的影响,仍有许多需要了解的地方。健康与疾病状态下脂蛋白代谢的领域,其通过饮食和药物的修饰,以及基因异质性对这些过程的贡献,是过去二十年来取得显著进展的领域之一,并且仍然是一个深入研究的领域。