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The impact of type of dietary protein, animal versus vegetable, in modifying cardiometabolic risk factors: a position paper from the International Lipid Expert Panel (ILEP)

Authors :
Zhubi-Bakija, Fjolla
Bajraktari, Gani
Bytyçi, Ibadete
Mikhailidis, Dimitri P.
Henein, Michael Y.
Latkovskis, Gustavs
Rexhaj, Zarife
Zhubi, Esra
Banach, Maciej
Stefanutti, Claudia
Alnouri, Fahad
Amar, Fahma
Atanasov, Atanas G.
Bartlomiejczyk, Marcin A.
Bjelakovic, Bojko
Bruckert, Eric
Cafferata, Alberto
Ceska, Richard
Cicero, Arrigo F.G.
Collet, Xavier
Descamps, Olivier
Djuric, Dragan
Durst, Ronen
Ezhov, Marat V.
Fras, Zlatko
Gaita, Dan
Hernandez, Adrian V.
Jones, Steven R.
Jozwiak, Jacek
Kakauridze, Nona
Katsiki, Niki
Khera, Amit
Kostner, Karam
Kubilius, Raimondas
Mancini, G.B. John
Marais, A. David
Martin, Seth S.
Martinez, Julio Acosta
Mazidi, Mohsen
Mirrakhimov, Erkin
Miserez, Andre R.
Mitchenko, Olena
Moriarty, Patrick M.
Nabavi, Seyed Mohammad
Nair, Devaki
Panagiotakos, Demosthenes B.
Paragh, György
Pella, Daniel
Penson, Peter E.
Petrulionienė, Žaneta
Pirro, Matteo
Postadzhiyan, Arman
Puri, Raman
Reda, Ashraf
Reiner, Željko
Riadh, Jemaa
Richter, Dimitri
Rizzo, Manfredi
Ruscica, Massimiliano
Sahebkar, Amirhossein
Sattar, Naveed
Serban, Maria-Corina
Shehab, Abdulla M.A.
Shek, Aleksandr B.
Sirtori, Cesare R.
Tomasik, Tomasz
Toth, Peter P.
Viigimaa, Margus
Vinereanu, Dragos
Vohnout, Branislav
von Haehling, Stephan
Vrablik, Michal
Wong, Nathan D.
Yeh, Hung-I.
Zhisheng, Jiang
Zirlik, Andreas
Source :
Clinical nutrition, Livingstone : Churchill Livingstone, 2021, vol. 40, no. 1, p. 255-276
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Proteins play a crucial role in metabolism, in maintaining fluid and acid-base balance and antibody synthesis. Dietary proteins are important nutrients and are classified into: 1) animal proteins (meat, fish, poultry, eggs and dairy), and, 2) plant proteins (legumes, nuts and soy). Dietary modification is one of the most important lifestyle changes that has been shown to significantly decrease the risk of cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) by attenuating related risk factors. The CVD burden is reduced by optimum diet through replacement of unprocessed meat with low saturated fat, animal proteins and plant proteins. In view of the available evidence, it has become acceptable to emphasize the role of optimum nutrition to maintain arterial and CV health. Such healthy diets are thought to increase satiety, facilitate weight loss, and improve CV risk. Different studies have compared the benefits of omnivorous and vegetarian diets. Animal protein related risk has been suggested to be greater with red or processed meat over and above poultry, fish and nuts, which carry a lower risk for CVD. In contrast, others have shown no association of red meat intake with CVD. The aim of this expert opinion recommendation was to elucidate the different impact of animal vs vegetable protein on modifying cardiometabolic risk factors. Many observational and interventional studies confirmed that increasing protein intake, especially plant-based proteins and certain animal-based proteins (poultry, fish, unprocessed red meat low in saturated fats and low-fat dairy products) have a positive effect in modifying cardiometabolic risk factors. Red meat intake correlates with increased CVD risk, mainly because of its non-protein ingredients (saturated fats). However, the way red meat is cooked and preserved matters. Thus, it is recommended to substitute red meat with poultry or fish in order to lower CVD risk. Specific amino acids have favourable results in modifying major risk factors for CVD, such as hypertension. Apart from meat, other animal-source proteins, like those found in dairy products (especially whey protein) are inversely correlated to hypertension, obesity and insulin resistance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02615614 and 15321983
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical nutrition, Livingstone : Churchill Livingstone, 2021, vol. 40, no. 1, p. 255-276
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..000a007a72d873a130331db1c61bfaab