Department of Human Nutrition, Centre for Advanced Food Studies, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 30, DK-1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
Br J Nutr. 2011 Jun 28;105(12):1823-31. doi: 10.1017/S0007114510005581. Epub 2011 Jan 31.
Intervention studies have demonstrated that saturated fat increases total and LDL-cholesterol concentrations, and it is therefore recommended that the intake of high-fat dairy products be limited. However, observational studies have found an inverse relationship between the intake of dairy products and incidence of CVD. We aimed to study whether the Ca content of dairy products influences the effect of dairy fat on the lipid profile. The study had a randomised cross-over design. Subjects (n 9) were randomised to one of the sequence of four isoenergetic 10 d diets: low Ca and low fat (LC/LF: approximately 700 mg Ca/d, 25 % of energy (fat); high Ca and LF (HC/LF: approximately 2800 mg Ca/d, 25 % of energy fat); LC and high fat (LC/HF: approximately 700 mg Ca/d, 49 E% fat); or HC and HF (approximately 2800 mg Ca/d, 49 E% fat). Blood variables were measured before and after each diet period, and faeces and urine were collected at the end of each diet period. A two-way ANOVA was used to examine the effect of Ca and fat intake. Independent of Ca intake, the HF diet increased the concentrations of total (9 %; P < 0·0001), LDL (14 %; P < 0·0001)- and HDL (13 %; P = 0·0002)-cholesterol compared with the LF diet. However, independent of fat intake, the HC diet decreased the concentrations of total (4 %; P = 0·0051) and LDL-cholesterol (10 %; P < 0·0001) but not HDL-cholesterol compared with the LC diet. In addition, total:HDL-cholesterol was decreased (5 %; P = 0·0299), and HDL:LDL was increased (12 %; P = 0·0097) by the HC diet compared with the LC diet. Faecal fat excretion was increased by both the HC (P < 0·0001) and HF (P = 0·0052) diets. In conclusion, we observed that dairy Ca seems to partly counteract the raising effect of dairy fat on total and LDL-cholesterol, without reducing HDL-cholesterol.
干预研究表明,饱和脂肪会增加总胆固醇和 LDL 胆固醇的浓度,因此建议限制高脂肪乳制品的摄入。然而,观察性研究发现乳制品的摄入量与 CVD 的发生率呈负相关。我们旨在研究乳制品中的钙含量是否会影响乳脂肪对血脂谱的影响。该研究采用随机交叉设计。受试者(n 9)随机分为以下 4 种等能量 10 天饮食中的一种顺序:低钙低脂(LC/LF:约 700mg Ca/d,占能量的 25%(脂肪);高钙低脂(HC/LF:约 2800mg Ca/d,占能量的 25%(脂肪);低钙高脂肪(LC/HF:约 700mg Ca/d,占能量的 49%(脂肪);高钙高脂肪(HC/HF:约 2800mg Ca/d,占能量的 49%(脂肪)。在每个饮食期前后测量血液变量,并在每个饮食期末收集粪便和尿液。采用双因素方差分析来检验钙和脂肪摄入的影响。独立于钙摄入,高脂肪饮食使总胆固醇(9%;P<0·0001)、LDL 胆固醇(14%;P<0·0001)和 HDL 胆固醇(13%;P=0·0002)浓度升高与低脂饮食相比。然而,独立于脂肪摄入,高钙饮食使总胆固醇(4%;P=0·0051)和 LDL 胆固醇(10%;P<0·0001)浓度降低,但与低钙饮食相比,HDL 胆固醇浓度没有降低。此外,与低钙饮食相比,高钙饮食使总胆固醇:HDL 胆固醇降低(5%;P=0·0299),HDL:LDL 胆固醇升高(12%;P=0·0097)。高钙(P<0·0001)和高脂肪(P=0·0052)饮食均可增加粪便脂肪排泄。总之,我们观察到乳制品中的钙似乎部分抵消了乳制品脂肪对总胆固醇和 LDL 胆固醇的升高作用,而不会降低 HDL 胆固醇。