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Effectiveness of a low-fat vegetarian diet in altering serum lipids in healthy premenopausal women.

The American journal of cardiology
April 15, 2000
N D Barnard et al. (6 authors)
Clinical TrialJournal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether a low-fat vegetarian diet significantly reduces serum total and LDL cholesterol concentrations in premenopausal women.

Results Summary

The study found that a low-fat vegetarian diet led to significant reductions in serum LDL (16.9%), HDL (16.5%), and total cholesterol (13.2%) concentrations, while triacylglycerol levels increased by 18.7%. The LDL/HDL ratio remained unchanged.

Population

Premenopausal women aged 22 to 48.

Effective Dosage

Approximately 10% of energy from fat.

Duration

2 menstrual cycles per intervention phase (total of 4 cycles).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (8)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
serum total cholesterol concentrations
premenopausal women
13.2%
significantly reduces
#1
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentrations
premenopausal women
16.9%
significantly reduces
#2
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol concentrations
premenopausal women
16.5%
decreased
#3
low-fat vegetarian diet
increase
mean serum triacylglycerol concentration
premenopausal women
18.7%
increased
#4
low-fat vegetarian diet
no change
LDL/HDL ratio
premenopausal women
-
remained unchanged
#5
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
serum total cholesterol concentrations
healthy premenopausal women
-
led to rapid and sizable reductions
#6
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
LDL cholesterol concentrations
healthy premenopausal women
-
led to rapid and sizable reductions
#7
low-fat vegetarian diet
decrease
HDL cholesterol concentrations
healthy premenopausal women
-
led to rapid and sizable reductions
#8
Abstract

Few controlled trials have studied cholesterol-lowering diets in premenopausal women. None has examined the cholesterol-lowering effect of a low-fat vegetarian diet, which, in other population groups, leads to marked reductions in serum cholesterol concentrations and, in combination with other life-style changes, a regression of atherosclerosis. We tested the hypothesis that a low-fat, vegetarian diet significantly reduces serum total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentrations in premenopausal women. In a crossover design, 35 women, aged 22 to 48, followed a low-fat vegetarian diet deriving approximately 10% of energy from fat for 2 menstrual cycles. For 2 additional cycles, they followed their customary diet while also taking a "supplement" (placebo) pill. Serum lipid concentrations were assessed at baseline and during each intervention phase. Mean serum LDL, high-density lipoprotein (HDL), and total cholesterol concentrations decreased 16. 9%, 16.5%, and 13.2%, respectively, from baseline to the intervention diet phase (p<0.001), whereas mean serum triacylglycerol concentration increased 18.7% (p<0.01). LDL/HDL ratio remained unchanged. Thus, in healthy premenopausal women, a low-fat vegetarian diet led to rapid and sizable reductions in serum total, LDL, and HDL cholesterol concentrations.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultBody WeightCholesterol, HDLCholesterol, LDLCross-Over StudiesDiet, Fat-RestrictedDiet, VegetarianFemaleHumansLipidsMenstrual CycleMiddle AgedPremenopauseWeight Loss
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations55
Citations/Year2.2
Relative Citation Ratio1.30
NIH Percentile59.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score0.66
Normalized Score0.69
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