Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man

Studies on the interaction of cholesterol absorption, synthesis, and excretion were carried out in eight patients using sterol balance techniques. Absorption of dietary cholesterol was found to increase with intake; up to 1 g of cholesterol was absorbed in patients fed as much as 3 g per day.In most...

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Main Authors: EDER QUINTÃO, SCOTT M. GRUNDY, E.H. AHRENS, JR.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1971-03-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520395341
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spelling doaj-3e8b388c8b074cd793a53e7dc0d980ec2021-04-24T05:52:12ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751971-03-01122233247Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in manEDER QUINTÃO0SCOTT M. GRUNDY1E.H. AHRENS, JR.2The Rockefeller University, New York 10021The Rockefeller University, New York 10021The Rockefeller University, New York 10021Studies on the interaction of cholesterol absorption, synthesis, and excretion were carried out in eight patients using sterol balance techniques. Absorption of dietary cholesterol was found to increase with intake; up to 1 g of cholesterol was absorbed in patients fed as much as 3 g per day.In most patients, increased absorption of cholesterol evoked two compensatory mechanisms: (a) increased reexcretion of cholesterol (but not of bile acids), and (b) decrease in total body synthesis. However, the amount of suppression in synthesis was extremely variable from one patient to another; one patient had no decrease in synthesis despite a large increment in absorption of dietary cholesterol, and two patients showed a complete suppression of synthesis.In the majority of cases the accumulation of cholesterol in body pools was small because of adequate compensation by reexcretion plus reduced synthesis, but in a few patients large accumulations occurred on high cholesterol diets when absorption exceeded the compensatory mechanisms. These accumulations were not necessarily reflected in plasma cholesterol levels; these increased only slightly or not at all.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520395341cholesterol homeostasiscompensatory mechanismssterol balance studiesabsorptionexcretionstorage
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author EDER QUINTÃO
SCOTT M. GRUNDY
E.H. AHRENS, JR.
spellingShingle EDER QUINTÃO
SCOTT M. GRUNDY
E.H. AHRENS, JR.
Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
Journal of Lipid Research
cholesterol homeostasis
compensatory mechanisms
sterol balance studies
absorption
excretion
storage
author_facet EDER QUINTÃO
SCOTT M. GRUNDY
E.H. AHRENS, JR.
author_sort EDER QUINTÃO
title Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
title_short Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
title_full Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
title_fullStr Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
title_full_unstemmed Effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
title_sort effects of dietary cholesterol on the regulation of total body cholesterol in man
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1971-03-01
description Studies on the interaction of cholesterol absorption, synthesis, and excretion were carried out in eight patients using sterol balance techniques. Absorption of dietary cholesterol was found to increase with intake; up to 1 g of cholesterol was absorbed in patients fed as much as 3 g per day.In most patients, increased absorption of cholesterol evoked two compensatory mechanisms: (a) increased reexcretion of cholesterol (but not of bile acids), and (b) decrease in total body synthesis. However, the amount of suppression in synthesis was extremely variable from one patient to another; one patient had no decrease in synthesis despite a large increment in absorption of dietary cholesterol, and two patients showed a complete suppression of synthesis.In the majority of cases the accumulation of cholesterol in body pools was small because of adequate compensation by reexcretion plus reduced synthesis, but in a few patients large accumulations occurred on high cholesterol diets when absorption exceeded the compensatory mechanisms. These accumulations were not necessarily reflected in plasma cholesterol levels; these increased only slightly or not at all.
topic cholesterol homeostasis
compensatory mechanisms
sterol balance studies
absorption
excretion
storage
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520395341
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