Replacing dairy fat with rapeseed oil causes rapid improvement of hyperlipidaemia: a randomized controlled study.
Study Goal
To investigate the effects of replacing a diet rich in saturated fat from dairy foods with a diet including rapeseed oil-based fat on lipoprotein profile, coagulation factors, and insulin sensitivity in hyperlipidaemic individuals.
Results Summary
The rapeseed oil diet significantly improved serum lipoprotein profile by reducing cholesterol, triglycerides, and LDL cholesterol, and modestly increased lipoprotein(a) and glucose disappearance rate, while HDL cholesterol and insulin sensitivity remained unchanged.
Population
20 free-living hyperlipidaemic subjects
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
3 weeks per diet (2×3-week crossover trial)
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RO diet | decrease | serum cholesterol | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -17% | reduced | #1 |
RO diet | decrease | triglycerides | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -20% | reduced | #2 |
RO diet | decrease | low-density lipoprotein cholesterol | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -17% | reduced | #3 |
RO diet | decrease | cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol ratio | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -21% | reduced | #4 |
RO diet | decrease | apolipoprotein (apo) B/apo A-I ratio | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -4% | reduced | #5 |
RO diet | decrease | factor VII coagulant activity (FVIIc) | hyperlipidaemic subjects | -5% | reduced | #6 |
RO diet | increase | serum lipoprotein(a) | hyperlipidaemic subjects | +6% | increased | #7 |
RO diet | increase | glucose disappearance rate (K-value) | hyperlipidaemic subjects | +33% | tended to increase | #8 |
RO diet | no change | HDL cholesterol | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not change | #9 |
RO diet | no change | insulin sensitivity | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not change | #10 |
RO diet | no change | fibrinogen | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not change | #11 |
RO diet | no change | tissue plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not change | #12 |
DF diet | no change | serum cholesterol | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #13 |
DF diet | no change | triglycerides | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #14 |
DF diet | no change | low-density lipoprotein cholesterol | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #15 |
DF diet | no change | cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol ratio | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #16 |
DF diet | no change | apolipoprotein (apo) B/apo A-I ratio | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #17 |
DF diet | no change | factor VII coagulant activity (FVIIc) | hyperlipidaemic subjects | - | did not reduce | #18 |
BACKGROUND: Rapeseed oil (RO), also known as canola oil, principally contains the unsaturated fatty acids 18:1n-9, 18:2n-6 and 18:3n-3 and may promote cardiometabolic health. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects on lipoprotein profile, factors of coagulation and insulin sensitivity of replacing a diet rich in saturated fat from dairy foods (DF diet) with a diet including RO-based fat (RO diet). DESIGN: During a 2×3-week randomized, controlled, cross-over trial, 20 free-living hyperlipidaemic subjects were provided with isocaloric test diets that differed in fat composition alone. Blood lipoprotein profile, coagulation and fibrinolytic factors and insulin sensitivity (euglycaemic clamp) were determined before and after the dietary intervention. RESULTS: All subjects completed the study, and compliance was high according to changes in serum fatty acids. The RO diet, but not the DF diet, reduced the levels of serum cholesterol (-17%), triglycerides (-20%) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (-17%), cholesterol/high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol ratio (-21%), apolipoprotein (apo) B/apo A-I ratio (-4%) and factor VII coagulant activity (FVIIc) (-5%) from baseline. These changes were significantly different between the diets (P=0.05 to P<0.0001), except for FVIIc (P=0.1). The RO diet, but not the DF diet, modestly increased serum lipoprotein(a) (+6%) and tended to increase the glucose disappearance rate (K-value, +33%). HDL cholesterol, insulin sensitivity, fibrinogen and tissue plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 levels did not change from baseline or differ between the two diets. CONCLUSIONS: In a diet moderately high in total fat, replacing dairy fat with RO causes a rapid and clinically relevant improvement in serum lipoprotein profile including lowering of triglycerides in hyperlipidaemic individuals.