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Dietary treatment to lower cholesterol and triglyceride and reduce cardiovascular risk

Francine K. Welty

2020Current Opinion in Lipidology42 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To provide an update on dietary measures to lower levels of LDL-C and triglyceride and reduce cardiovascular (CVD) outcomes. RECENT FINDINGS: Fifty-year follow-up in the Seven Countries Study confirmed that cholesterol levels correlate with saturated fat intake and all-cause mortality and age at death. In the PURE study, refined carbohydrate increased CVD risk whereas saturated fat did not despite increasing LDL-C levels; limitations are discussed. Reports on CVD risk with eggs provide conflicting results. Plant-based diets with healthful complex carbohydrates reduced CVD. The REDUCE-IT trial lowered triglyceride 21.6% and reduced CVD events 26.1% with an omega-3 fatty acid, An omega-3 fatty acid index at least 4% with EPA and docosahexaenoic acid prevented coronary plaque progression. A clinician guide to counsel patients on nutrition and heart healthy diets was recently published. SUMMARY: Based on the evidence, individuals should continue to minimize saturated fats and refined carbohydrates, eliminate trans-fat and increase fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy, and fish or other omega-3 fatty acids. Adhering to a Mediterranean diet is strongly recommended because of lowering CVD and total mortality. High-dose omega-3 fatty acids lower triglyceride, reduce CVD and prevent coronary plaque progression.

Topics & Concepts

TriglycerideMedicineDocosahexaenoic acidCholesterolFatty acidFood scienceSaturated fatSaturated fatty acidEicosapentaenoic acidMediterranean dietInternal medicinePolyunsaturated fatty acidChemistryBiochemistryFatty Acid Research and HealthNutritional Studies and DietDiet and metabolism studies
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