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膳食脂肪摄入与健康。

Dietary fat consumption and health.

作者信息

Lichtenstein A H, Kennedy E, Barrier P, Danford D, Ernst N D, Grundy S M, Leveille G A, Van Horn L, Williams C L, Booth S L

机构信息

Tufts University, Boston, MA 02111-1525, USA.

出版信息

Nutr Rev. 1998 May;56(5 Pt 2):S3-19; discussion S19-28. doi: 10.1111/j.1753-4887.1998.tb01728.x.

Abstract

Dietary Guidelines have emerged over the past 30 years recommending that Americans limit their consumption of total fat and saturated fat as one way to reduce the risk of a range of chronic diseases. However, a low-fat diet is not a no-fat diet. Dietary fat clearly serves a number of essential functions. For example, maternal energy deficiency, possible exacerbated by very low-fat intakes (< 15% of energy), is one key determinant in the etiology of low birth weight. The debate continues over recommendations for limiting total fat and saturated fatty acid intake in children. Recent evidence indicates that diets with adequate energy providing less than 30% of energy from fat are sufficient to promote normal growth and normal sexual maturation. More attention needs to be devoted to the effect of dietary fat reduction on the nutrient density of children's diets. The association between dietary fat and CHD has been extensively studied. Diets high in saturated fatty acids and trans fatty acids increase LDL cholesterol levels, and in turn, the risk of heart disease. The relationship between high-carbohydrate/low-fat diets and CHD is more ambiguous because high-carbohydrate diets induce dyslipidemia in certain individuals. Obesity among adults and children is now of epidemic proportions in the United States. High-fat diets leading to excessive energy intakes are strongly linked to the increasing obesity in the United States. However, the prevalence of obesity has increased during the same time period that dietary fat intake (both in absolute terms and as a percentage of total dietary energy) has decreased. These trends suggest that a concomitant decrease in total dietary energy and modifications of other lifestyle factors, such as physical activity, also need to be emphasized. Obesity is also an independent risk factor for the development of diabetes. The current availability of fat-modified foods offers the potential for dietary fat reduction and treatment of the comorbidities associated with diabetes. However, to date, few studies have documented the effectiveness of fat-modified foods as part of a weight loss regimen or in reduction in CHD risks among individuals with diabetes mellitus. The association between total dietary fat and cancer is still under debate. While there is some evidence demonstrating associations between dietary fat intake and cancers of the breast, prostate, and colon, there are serious methodologic issues, including the difficulty in differentiating the effects of dietary fat independent of total energy intake. Reported total fat and saturated fatty acid intakes as a percentage of total energy have been declining over the past 30 years in the United States. Despite this encouraging trend, the majority of individuals--regardless of age--do not report consuming a diet that meets the levels of fat and saturated fatty acids recommended by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. On a relative basis, saturated fat intake has gone down less than has total fat intake. Individuals of all ages who report consuming a diet with < or = 30% of energy from fat consistently have lower energy intakes. Given the increasing rates of obesity in the United States at an earlier and earlier age, dietary fat reduction may be an effective part of an overall strategy to balance energy consumption with energy needs. In each of the age/gender groups reporting consumption of < or = 30% of energy from fat and less than 10% of energy from saturated fatty acids, fat-modified foods play a more important role in their diets than for people who are consuming higher levels of fat and saturated fat. The data are clear than fat-modified foods make a more significant contribution to diets of consumers with low-fat intakes. While one cannot argue cause and effect from the results presented, the patterns of fat-modified foods/low-fat intakes are consistent. The focus on overall diet quality is often lost in the national obsession with lowering fat inta

摘要

在过去30年里,膳食指南不断涌现,建议美国人限制总脂肪和饱和脂肪的摄入量,以此作为降低一系列慢性病风险的一种方式。然而,低脂饮食并非无脂饮食。膳食脂肪显然具有多种重要功能。例如,母体能量缺乏(极低脂肪摄入量可能会加剧这种情况,即脂肪摄入量低于能量的15%)是低出生体重病因的一个关键决定因素。关于限制儿童总脂肪和饱和脂肪酸摄入量的建议,争论仍在继续。最近的证据表明,脂肪提供能量低于30%且能量充足的饮食足以促进正常生长和性成熟。需要更多地关注减少膳食脂肪对儿童饮食营养密度的影响。膳食脂肪与冠心病之间的关联已得到广泛研究。富含饱和脂肪酸和反式脂肪酸的饮食会升高低密度脂蛋白胆固醇水平,进而增加患心脏病的风险。高碳水化合物/低脂饮食与冠心病之间的关系更为模糊,因为高碳水化合物饮食会在某些个体中引发血脂异常。在美国,成人和儿童肥胖现象如今已呈流行态势。导致能量摄入过多的高脂肪饮食与美国日益增加的肥胖问题密切相关。然而,在膳食脂肪摄入量(无论是绝对值还是占总膳食能量的百分比)下降的同一时期,肥胖患病率却有所上升。这些趋势表明,还需要强调同时减少总膳食能量以及改变其他生活方式因素,如体育活动。肥胖也是糖尿病发病的一个独立危险因素。目前市面上的低脂食品为减少膳食脂肪以及治疗与糖尿病相关的合并症提供了可能。然而,迄今为止,很少有研究记录低脂食品作为减肥方案的一部分或对糖尿病患者降低冠心病风险的有效性。膳食总脂肪与癌症之间的关联仍在争论之中。虽然有一些证据表明膳食脂肪摄入量与乳腺癌、前列腺癌和结肠癌之间存在关联,但存在严重的方法学问题,包括难以区分膳食脂肪独立于总能量摄入的影响。在美国,过去30年里报告的总脂肪和饱和脂肪酸摄入量占总能量的百分比一直在下降。尽管有这一令人鼓舞的趋势,但大多数人——无论年龄大小——报告的饮食都未达到《美国膳食指南》推荐的脂肪和饱和脂肪酸水平。相对而言,饱和脂肪摄入量的下降幅度小于总脂肪摄入量。所有年龄段报告脂肪能量占比≤30%的人,其能量摄入量一直较低。鉴于美国肥胖率在越来越小的年龄就不断上升,减少膳食脂肪可能是使能量消耗与能量需求达到平衡的总体战略的一个有效组成部分。在每个报告脂肪能量占比≤30%且饱和脂肪能量占比低于10%的年龄/性别组中,低脂食品在他们的饮食中所起的作用比那些摄入较高水平脂肪和饱和脂肪的人更大。数据清楚地表明,低脂食品对低脂肪摄入量消费者的饮食贡献更大。虽然不能从所呈现的结果中推断因果关系,但低脂食品/低脂肪摄入量的模式是一致的。在全国对降低脂肪摄入量的痴迷中,往往会忽略对整体饮食质量的关注。

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