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Plasma fatty acid responses to a calorie-restricted, DASH-style diet with lean beef. | LitMetric

Plasma fatty acid responses to a calorie-restricted, DASH-style diet with lean beef.

Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids

Department of Applied Health Science, Indiana University School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA. Electronic address:

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Plasma fatty acid levels can indicate health and nutrition, and this study analyzed these levels in older obese adults on a specific diet.
  • The research involved measuring plasma fatty acids over 12 weeks while participants consumed a DASH-based diet with varying amounts of lean beef, leading to a 6% body weight loss and decreased triglyceride levels.
  • Results showed distinct patterns of fatty acid response to the diet, suggesting that dietary composition influences metabolic processes related to fat.

Article Abstract

Background: Plasma fatty acid (FA) levels are used as biomarkers of health outcomes and nutritional intake.

Methods: This was an exploratory analysis of the plasma FA profile from a parallel-designed, controlled-feeding study in older, obese adults (females, n = 17; males, n = 11) consuming a DASH-based diet with two levels of lean beef (3oz and 6oz per day). Plasma FA levels (as percent composition) were measured by gas chromatography from five timepoints over the 12-week intervention. The primary plasma FA change patterns modeled were sustained (initial change to 'new normal') or homeostatic (initial change, then return toward original baseline).

Results: The study diet was low in fat (< 60 g/d), especially polyunsaturated FAs (PUFAs; < 5 g/d), compared to the average American diet of obese individuals as described by a nationally representative sample. Participants lost ∼6% of body mass and lowered plasma fasting triglyceride levels by ∼9% over the course of the study. With strong to very strong strength of evidence, the individual FAs displaying a sustained response were C16:1n7t, C18:1n9, C20:1n9, and C18:2n6, and homeostatic response, C18:0, 24:0, C24:1n9, C18:3n6, C20:4n6, and C22:6n3 (Ps < 0.0021, Bonferroni-adjusted). The data suggested that systematic changes in both the PUFA and de novo lipogenesis pathways occurred.

Conclusions: Diet can affect plasma FA changes both due to nutritional composition and by affecting metabolic processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plefa.2022.102413DOI Listing

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