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The effects of very low fat diets enriched with fish or kangaroo meat on cold-induced vasoconstriction and platelet function

journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-16, 03:16 authored by LA Butcher, K O'Dea, Andrew SinclairAndrew Sinclair, JD Parkin, IL Smith, P Blombery
Eighteen healthy volunteers consumed very low fat diets (<7% of daily energy) enriched with different sources of long chain (C20 and C22) polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Three diets provided 500 g/day of fish caught in the tropical waters of Australia (rich in arachidonic acid and docosahexaenoic acid), fish caught in the southern waters of Australia (rich in docosahexaenoic acid), or kangaroo meat (rich in linoleic and arachidonic acids). The fourth diet was vegetarian, similarly low in fat but containing no 20- and 22-carbon PUFA. An increase in the percentage of a particular C20 or C22 PUFA in the plasma phospholipid fraction in subjects consuming these low fat diets corresponded to the dietary PUFA composition. This study examined the effect of dietary modification of the level of arachidonic acid in plasma phospholipids on both traditional measures of platelet function and on cold-induced vasoconstriction. The cold pressor response, measured by venous occlusion plethysmography, was depressed in diets which elevated the levels of arachidonic acid in plasma lipids (kangaroo and tropical fish), enhanced after subjects consumed a diet which increased the levels of docosahexaenoic acid and eicosapentaenoic acid (southern fish diet), and was unchanged by the low fat vegetarian diet. There was no effect on bleeding time or platelet responsiveness. © 1990.

History

Journal

Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids

Volume

39

Pagination

221-226

Location

Scotland

ISSN

0952-3278

eISSN

1532-2823

Language

en

Issue

3

Publisher

Elsevier BV