Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.

Human subjects were infused intraduodenally with either lecithin (150 mg/kg/hr) or safflower oil (100 mg/kg/hr)of similar fatty acid composition, and plasma lipoproteins were studied when constant plasma lipid levels were reached. Both types of fat induced increases of lipoproteins of Sf > 400 (c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: F U Beil, S M Grundy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1980-07-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520422230
id doaj-bd93998d88b04eeeaeb900ed179598d2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bd93998d88b04eeeaeb900ed179598d22021-04-24T05:54:17ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751980-07-01215525536Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.F U BeilS M GrundyHuman subjects were infused intraduodenally with either lecithin (150 mg/kg/hr) or safflower oil (100 mg/kg/hr)of similar fatty acid composition, and plasma lipoproteins were studied when constant plasma lipid levels were reached. Both types of fat induced increases of lipoproteins of Sf > 400 (chylomicrons) and Sf 20–400 (VLDL). Lecithin infusions produced increases predominantly in VLDL, whereas infusion of safflower oil induced mainly chylomicrons. Chylomicrons derived from lecithin were generally smaller and had a high phospholipid:triglyceride ratio (mean 0.15) than those produced during safflower oil infusions (mean 0.08). The increases in VLDL from both lipids occurred mainly in larger particles of this density range. This “incremental VLDL” had a lower cholesterol:triglyceride ratio (0.098) than preinfusion VLDL (0.283) and probably represented “small chylomicrons” of gut origin. The differences in lipoproteins resulting from infusion of lecithin and safflower oil in human subjects were not observed in rats; in the latter, lecithin induced large chylomicrons to the same extent as did safflower oil. Lecithin absorption measured over 50- or 100-cm intestinal segments averaged 41%, but was probably greater over the whole of the small intestine. Lecithin infusion unexpectedly was found to decrease markedly the absorption of cholesterol in the upper part of the small intestine.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520422230
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F U Beil
S M Grundy
spellingShingle F U Beil
S M Grundy
Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet F U Beil
S M Grundy
author_sort F U Beil
title Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
title_short Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
title_full Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
title_fullStr Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
title_full_unstemmed Studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
title_sort studies on plasma lipoproteins during absorption of exogenous lecithin in man.
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1980-07-01
description Human subjects were infused intraduodenally with either lecithin (150 mg/kg/hr) or safflower oil (100 mg/kg/hr)of similar fatty acid composition, and plasma lipoproteins were studied when constant plasma lipid levels were reached. Both types of fat induced increases of lipoproteins of Sf > 400 (chylomicrons) and Sf 20–400 (VLDL). Lecithin infusions produced increases predominantly in VLDL, whereas infusion of safflower oil induced mainly chylomicrons. Chylomicrons derived from lecithin were generally smaller and had a high phospholipid:triglyceride ratio (mean 0.15) than those produced during safflower oil infusions (mean 0.08). The increases in VLDL from both lipids occurred mainly in larger particles of this density range. This “incremental VLDL” had a lower cholesterol:triglyceride ratio (0.098) than preinfusion VLDL (0.283) and probably represented “small chylomicrons” of gut origin. The differences in lipoproteins resulting from infusion of lecithin and safflower oil in human subjects were not observed in rats; in the latter, lecithin induced large chylomicrons to the same extent as did safflower oil. Lecithin absorption measured over 50- or 100-cm intestinal segments averaged 41%, but was probably greater over the whole of the small intestine. Lecithin infusion unexpectedly was found to decrease markedly the absorption of cholesterol in the upper part of the small intestine.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520422230
work_keys_str_mv AT fubeil studiesonplasmalipoproteinsduringabsorptionofexogenouslecithininman
AT smgrundy studiesonplasmalipoproteinsduringabsorptionofexogenouslecithininman
_version_ 1721511500480249856