Effect
on Blood Lipids of Very High Intakes of Fiber in Diets
Low in Saturated Fat and Cholesterol
The New England Journal of Medicine
David Jenkins, Thomas Wolever,
A. Venketeshwer Rao, Robert A. Hegele, Steven J. Mitchell, Thomas
Ransom, Dana L. Boctor, Peter J. Spadafora, Alexandra L. Jenkins,
Christine Mehling, Lisa Katzman Relle, Philip W. Connelly, Jon
A. Story, Emily J. Furumoto, Paul Corey, and Pierre Wursch
ABSTRACT
Background
It is known that soluble
fiber
in the diet can lower blood lipid levels. It is less
certain, however, that eating foods with soluble
fiber
will further lower blood lipids when the intake of saturated
fat and cholesterol has already been reduced to very
low levels. Furthermore, the mechanism of the lipid-lowering
effect of fiber
has not been elucidated.
Methods
To address these questions, we studied 43 volunteers with
hyperlipidemia in a crossover study involving two four-month
dietary periods. The two metabolic diets contained foods
high in either soluble or insoluble
fiber
and were separated by a two-month National Cholesterol
Education Program Step 2 diet. The metabolic diets
were low in saturated fat (<4 percent of total calories)
and cholesterol (<25 mg per 1000 kcal), high in
carbohydrate ( 60 percent of total calories), and very high
in fiber (>24 g per 1000 kcal).
Results
Blood lipids fell to their lowest levels by week 4 of both
study diets. When the soluble-fiber
period was compared with the insoluble-fiber
period, the subjects' total, low-density lipoprotein
(LDL), and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels
were found to be lower by a mean (±SE) of 4.9 ±0.9
percent (P<0.001), 4.8 ±1.3 percent (P<0.001), and
3.4 ±1.3 percent (P = 0.014), respectively. In contrast,
the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol was not significantly
different during the two dietary periods. The loss of fecal
bile acids was 83 ±14 percent greater during the soluble-fiber
period than during the insoluble-fiber
period (P<0.001) and was related to the differences
in total and LDL cholesterol and apolipoprotein B levels
(r = 0.42, P = 0.005; r = 0.49, P<0.001; and r =
0.33, P = 0.035, respectively). The difference in serum
cholesterol levels between the two dietary periods was
greater among the men (7.5 ±1.2 percent, P<0.001) than
among the women (3.4 ±1.2 percent, P = 0.008).
Conclusions
Very high intakes of foods rich in soluble
fiber
lower blood cholesterol levels even when the main dietary
modifiers of blood lipids -- namely, saturated fat
and cholesterol -- are greatly reduced.
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