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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 42, 399-413, Copyright © 1985 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc
ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS |
SY Oh and PA Monaco
Effect of four test diets differing in the ratio of polyunsaturated to saturated fats (P/S, 1.8 vs 0.28) and two cholesterol levels (1,000 vs 300 mg/day) for each level of the P/S ratio was determined on plasma lipid levels, lipoprotein compositions and concentrations, and fecal steroid excretion in a controlled diet study with 11 normal young men using a crossover design. Plasma cholesterol levels were significantly decreased by the diets high in P/S ratio regardless of the dietary cholesterol levels (14% decrease by high cholesterol and 20% in low cholesterol) while the diets low in P/S ratio increased cholesterol by an average of 24 and 22% in presence of high and low cholesterol, respectively. Lipids and apoproteins of lower-density lipoproteins were changed in accordance with those of plasma cholesterol but changes in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) appear to depend on both cholesterol content and P/S ratio. Dietary cholesterol level profoundly influenced the excretion of neutral sterols and diets high in P/S ratio significantly (p less than 0.05) increased fecal bile acid extraction. The present study demonstrated that dietary polyunsaturated fats, when a moderate amount was consumed, were effective and beneficial hypocholesterolemic nutrients without reducing HDL-cholesterol.
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