Kratz Mario, Weigle David S, Breen Patricia A, Meeuws Kaatje E, Burden Verna R, Callahan Holly S, Matthys Colleen C, Purnell Jonathan Q
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98109, USA.
J Investig Med. 2010 Jun;58(5):711-9. doi: 10.231/JIM.0b013e3181da4d37.
The impact of low-fat diets on the plasma lipoprotein profile is incompletely understood.
We conducted two 16-week dietary studies to compare the effects of a moderate-fat (mod-FAT) baseline diet with isocaloric and ad libitum low-fat diets rich in either carbohydrates (high-CHO, n = 16) or protein (high-PRO, n = 19) on plasma lipids, post-heparin lipase activities, cholesteryl ester transfer protein, and phospholipid transfer protein.
Switching from the mod-FAT to the isocaloric high-CHO diet lowered plasma high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations (P < 0.001) and tended to increase triglyceride levels (P = 0.087). Cholesterol content in the larger, buoyant low-density lipoprotein (LDL) fractions decreased, whereas those of the very-low-density lipoprotein, intermediate-density lipoprotein, and smaller, denser LDL fractions tended to increase. These changes were largely reversed when subjects lost weight by consuming this high-CHO diet ad libitum. Switching from the mod-FAT diet to the isocaloric high-PRO diet did not increase cholesterol content in the small-dense LDL fraction and led to decreases in both LDL and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol in plasma (P < 0.001 for both).Consumption of the high-protein ad libitum diet accompanied by weight loss did not change plasma lipids further, except for a shift of cholesterol from dense low-density lipoprotein fractions to more buoyant low-density lipoprotein fractions. Cholesteryl ester transfer protein concentrations decreased with high-cholesterol feeding, whereas cholesteryl ester transfer protein concentrations and hepatic lipase and phospholipid transfer protein activities all decreased during high-protein feeding.
Both high-CHO and high-PRO diets improve plasma lipid-related risk of cardiovascular disease when consumed ad libitum.
低脂饮食对血浆脂蛋白谱的影响尚未完全明确。
我们开展了两项为期16周的饮食研究,比较中等脂肪(中度脂肪,mod-FAT)基线饮食与等热量且随意摄入的富含碳水化合物(高碳水化合物,high-CHO,n = 16)或蛋白质(高蛋白,high-PRO,n = 19)的低脂饮食对血脂、肝素后脂肪酶活性、胆固醇酯转运蛋白和磷脂转运蛋白的影响。
从中等脂肪饮食转换为等热量的高碳水化合物饮食会降低血浆高密度脂蛋白胆固醇浓度(P < 0.001),并倾向于升高甘油三酯水平(P = 0.087)。较大的、浮力较大的低密度脂蛋白(LDL)组分中的胆固醇含量降低,而极低密度脂蛋白、中间密度脂蛋白以及较小的、密度较高的LDL组分中的胆固醇含量则倾向于升高。当受试者通过随意摄入这种高碳水化合物饮食而体重减轻时,这些变化在很大程度上得到了逆转。从中等脂肪饮食转换为等热量的高蛋白饮食不会增加小而密LDL组分中的胆固醇含量,并导致血浆中LDL和高密度脂蛋白胆固醇均降低(两者P均< 0.001)。随意摄入高蛋白饮食并伴有体重减轻,除了胆固醇从致密的低密度脂蛋白组分转移到更具浮力的低密度脂蛋白组分外,不会进一步改变血脂。高胆固醇饮食时胆固醇酯转运蛋白浓度降低,而高蛋白饮食期间胆固醇酯转运蛋白浓度以及肝脂肪酶和磷脂转运蛋白活性均降低。
随意摄入高碳水化合物和高蛋白饮食均可改善与心血管疾病相关的血浆脂质风险。