Kakde Smitha, Bhopal Raj S, Bhardwaj Swati, Misra Anoop
Edinburgh Migration, Ethnicity and Health Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Edinburgh Migration, Ethnicity and Health Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Nutrition. 2017 Jan;33:216-224. doi: 10.1016/j.nut.2016.07.006. Epub 2016 Jul 26.
Known risk factors do not fully explain the comparatively high susceptibility to coronary heart disease (CHD) in South Asians (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, and Sri Lankan populations in South Asia and overseas). The search for explanatory hypotheses and cofactors that raise susceptibility of South Asians to CHD continues. The aim of this study was to propose "the high-heat food preparation hypothesis," where neo-formed contaminants (NFCs) such as trans-fatty acids (TFAs) and advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) are the cofactors.
We reviewed the actions of AGEs and TFAs, the burden of these products in tissues and blood in South Asians, the relationship between these products and CHD, the effects of preparing food and reheating oils at high temperatures on NFCs, and the foods and mode of preparation in South Asian and Chinese cuisines.
Animal and human studies show NFCs increase the risk for CHD. Evidence on the consumption and body burden of these products across ethnic groups is not available, and comparable data on the NFC content of the cuisine of South Asians and potential comparison populations (e.g., the Chinese with lower CHD rates) are limited. South Asians' cuisine is dominated by frying and roasting techniques that use high temperatures. South Asian foods have high TFA content primarily through the use of partially hydrogenated fats, reheated oils, and high-heat cooking. Reheating oils greatly increases the TFA content. In comparison, Chinese cuisine involves mostly braising, steaming, and boiling rather than frying.
We hypothesize that South Asians' susceptibility to CHD is partly attributable to high-heat treated foods producing high NFCs. Research to accrue direct evidence is proposed.
已知的风险因素并不能完全解释南亚人(南亚及海外的印度、巴基斯坦、孟加拉和斯里兰卡人群)对冠心病(CHD)相对较高的易感性。对能够解释南亚人易患冠心病的假说和辅助因素的探索仍在继续。本研究的目的是提出“高温烹饪食物假说”,即反式脂肪酸(TFA)和晚期糖基化终产物(AGEs)等新形成的污染物(NFCs)是辅助因素。
我们回顾了AGEs和TFA的作用、这些产物在南亚人组织和血液中的负担、这些产物与冠心病之间的关系、高温烹饪食物和反复使用食用油对NFCs的影响,以及南亚和中国菜肴中的食物及烹饪方式。
动物和人体研究表明,NFCs会增加患冠心病的风险。目前尚无不同种族人群对这些产物的摄入量和体内负担的相关证据,关于南亚菜肴和潜在对照人群(如冠心病发病率较低的中国人)的NFC含量的可比数据也很有限。南亚菜肴主要以高温油炸和烘烤技术为主。南亚食物的TFA含量高主要是由于使用了部分氢化脂肪、反复使用的油以及高温烹饪。反复使用食用油会大大增加TFA含量。相比之下,中国菜肴大多采用炖、蒸和煮的方式,而非油炸。
我们推测,南亚人对冠心病的易感性部分归因于高温处理食物产生的高含量NFCs。建议开展研究以积累直接证据。