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S E Kasim, S Martino, P N Kim, S Khilnani, A Boomer, J Depper, B A Reading, L K Heilbrun, Dietary and anthropometric determinants of plasma lipoproteins during a long-term low-fat diet in healthy women, The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Volume 57, Issue 2, February 1993, Pages 146–153, https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/57.2.146
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Abstract
Long-term (1 y) effects of dietary fat intake on lipoprotein metabolism were determined in 72 healthy women receiving either a 15%-fat diet (n = 34) or usual diet (n = 38). Every three months food records, weight, waist-hip ratio (W:H), percent body fat, fasting plasma triglyceride, cholesterol (C), high-density-lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), HDL2-C and HDL3-C; apolipoprotein B and A-I, and postheparin lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic triglyceride lipase activities were determined. In one year, the low-fat-diet (LFD) group had 17% and the nonintervention-diet group had 36% dietary fat. The LFD group showed decreases in cholesterol: 7% TC, 13% low-density lipoprotein (LDL), and 8% HDL. Apolipoprotein A-I, decreased early. Apolipoprotein B did not change. Plasma triglyceride correlated with weight. Percent body fat and W:H correlated with the total and LDL-C. Changes in HDL-C and/or HDL2-C and LPL correlated directly with the changes in dietary fat and inversely with dietary carbohydrate. Changes in total-C or LDLC correlated with the changes in weight and W:H, but not with the changes in nutrient intake.
- low-density lipoproteins
- ldl cholesterol lipoproteins
- high density lipoprotein cholesterol
- triglycerides
- waist-hip ratio
- lipoproteins
- fat-restricted diet
- cholesterol
- diet
- high density lipoproteins
- apolipoproteins b
- dietary carbohydrates
- fasting
- food
- lipoprotein lipase
- plasma
- apolipoprotein a-i
- lipase
- dietary fats
- nutrients
- body fat
- lipoprotein metabolism
- nutrient intake
