Is There a Correlation between Dietary and Blood Cholesterol? Evidence from Epidemiological Data and Clinical Interventions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Epidemiolocal Evidence
3. Meta-Analysis
Population/Number of Studies | Association Assessed | Main Result | Reference (Year) |
---|---|---|---|
177,555 adults from PURE, TRASCEND and ONTARGET studies | Egg consumption with blood lipids and CVD | Higher egg intake is not associated with TC, LDL, TG, HDL, total mortality, or CVD. | [23] (2020) |
8095 hypertense adults from the China Health and Nutrition Survey | Cholesterol intake from eggs and other sources and mortality | Cholesterol from eggs but not other sources is associated with lower mortality. | [28] (2020) |
8358 Chinese adults | Dietary cholesterol and dyslipidemia | Cholesterol intake is associated with lower plasma TG and higher HDL-cholesterol in women, but not men. Cholesterol from eggs is associated with lower risk of dyslipidemia. | [34] (2022) |
Three large cohort studies: NHS (1980–2012), NHS II (1991–2017) and HPFS (1986–2016). 16 prospective cohort studies (6 American, 8 European, and 2 Asian) | Egg intake and CVD risk | An increase of one egg per day is not associated with any CVD risk. Egg intake is associated with lower CVD risk in Asian populations. | [39] (2017) |
39 prospective cohort studies from North America, Europe, and Asia | Egg consumption and the risk of CVD, CHD, and stroke | Consumption of six eggs per week has an inverse association with CVD events (but not stroke), when compared to no intake. No association is found for stroke. | [35] (2021) |
40 studies with participants without diagnosed CVD | No association between dietary cholesterol and coronary artery disease (CAD), ischemic stroke, or hemorrhagic stroke. Dietary cholesterol increases total blood cholesterol, without affecting LDL/HDL ratio. | [36] (2015) | |
NHS (1980–2012), NHS II (1991–2017) and HPFS (1986–2016). 16 prospective cohort studies (6 American, 8 European, and 2 Asian) | Eegg intake and the risk of developing T2DM | Higher egg intake is associated with lower prevalence of hypercholesterolemia. | [42] (2020) |
4. Clinical Interventions. Effects of Dietary Cholesterol on Plasma Lipids and Lipoprotein Subfractions
5. Mechanisms to Manage Dietary Cholesterol
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lipoprotein | Dietary Cholesterol Intake and Population | Changes | Reference (Year) |
---|---|---|---|
LDL Diameter Compared to added 0 mg/d cholesterol | 510 mg/day for 4 weeks in children | LDL diameter was larger | [10] (2005) |
Large LDL compared to 0 added mg/cholesterol | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in elderly people | Higher concentrations of large LDL | [53] (2006) |
Large LDL compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 210, 425, and 640 mg/day in young individuals for 4 weeks each | Higher concentrations of large LDL | [51] (2017) |
Large LDL Compared to an oatmeal breakfast | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in young population | Higher concentrations of large LDL | [52] (2018) |
Large LDL: Compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in an overweight/obese population | Higher concentrations of large LDL | [54] (2010) |
Small LDL: Compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 210, 425, and 640 mg/day in young individuals for 4 weeks each | Lower concentrations of small LDL | [51] (2017) |
Small LDL: Compared to 0 mg of dietary cholesterol | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in an overweight/obese population | Lower concentrations of small LDL | [54] (2010) |
HDL Diameter: Compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in elderly people | Larger HDL diameter | [53] (2006) |
Large HDL: Compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 210, 425, and 640 mg/day in young individuals for 4 weeks each | Higher concentrations of large HDL | [51] (2005) |
Large HDL: Compared to an oatmeal breakfast | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in young population | Higher concentrations of large HDL | [52] (2018) |
Large HDL: Compared to 0 mg of added dietary cholesterol | 640 mg/day for 4 weeks in an overweight/obese population | Higher concentrations of large HDL | [54] (2010) |
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Fernandez, M.L.; Murillo, A.G. Is There a Correlation between Dietary and Blood Cholesterol? Evidence from Epidemiological Data and Clinical Interventions. Nutrients 2022, 14, 2168. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14102168
Fernandez ML, Murillo AG. Is There a Correlation between Dietary and Blood Cholesterol? Evidence from Epidemiological Data and Clinical Interventions. Nutrients. 2022; 14(10):2168. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14102168
Chicago/Turabian StyleFernandez, Maria Luz, and Ana Gabriela Murillo. 2022. "Is There a Correlation between Dietary and Blood Cholesterol? Evidence from Epidemiological Data and Clinical Interventions" Nutrients 14, no. 10: 2168. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14102168
APA StyleFernandez, M. L., & Murillo, A. G. (2022). Is There a Correlation between Dietary and Blood Cholesterol? Evidence from Epidemiological Data and Clinical Interventions. Nutrients, 14(10), 2168. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14102168