1. Effects of diets containing high or low amounts of stearic acid on plasma lipoprotein fractions and fecal fatty acid excretion of men.
- Author
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Dougherty RM, Allman MA, and Iacono JM
- Subjects
- Adult, Cholesterol blood, Cross-Over Studies, Dietary Fats administration & dosage, Digestion, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Erythrocytes chemistry, Fatty Acids blood, Fatty Acids metabolism, Food, Formulated, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Palmitic Acid, Palmitic Acids analysis, Palmitic Acids pharmacology, Stearic Acids administration & dosage, Time Factors, Dietary Fats pharmacology, Fatty Acids analysis, Feces chemistry, Lipoproteins blood, Stearic Acids pharmacology
- Abstract
Ten middle-aged males participated in a crossover study to determine the cholesterolemic effect of high amounts of stearic acid in a natural diet. They consumed a 20-d stabilization diet followed by two 40-d intervention diets containing either 1.5% of energy as stearic (18:0) acid and 7.3% of energy as palmitic (16:0) acid (low stearate: LS) or 2.4% of energy as 16:0 and 7.3% of energy as 18:0 (high stearate: HS). The experimental diets also contained approximately 10% of energy each as saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids and 7.2-8% of energy as polyunsaturated fatty acids. The primary source of 18:0 in the HS diet was sheanut oil (commercially referred to as shea butter) and palm oil and butter in the LS diet. Plasma total, low-density-lipoprotein, and high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol were significantly lower with the HS than with the LS diet. Total fecal fatty acid excretion was higher throughout the HS period. Apparent digestibility of the major dietary fatty acids showed that all of the selected fatty acids, except 18:0, were > or = 95% absorbed. These data demonstrate that feeding diets containing about two times the usual amount of stearic acid consumed in the United States, contributed to an increase in plasma lipoprotein concentrations at 40 d from an earlier decrease at 20 d. The time required to achieve stable cholesterol concentrations appears to vary depending on the kind of saturated fatty acids present in the diet.
- Published
- 1995
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