6533b825fe1ef96bd1282907

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Mediterranean Diet decreases LDL atherogenicity in high cardiovascular risk individuals: a randomized controlled trial.

Emilio RosEmilio RosLluis Serra-majemLluis Serra-majemJosé LapetraFernando ArósMiguel ÁNgel Martínez-gonzálezMiguel ÁNgel Martínez-gonzálezAlberto GodayOlga CastañerM. Carmen López-sabaterM. Carmen López-sabaterRamon EstruchRamon EstruchMontserrat FitóMiquel FiolXavier PintóÁLvaro HernáezÁLvaro HernáezDolores CorellaDolores CorellaRafael De La TorreJordi Salas-salvadó

subject

0301 basic medicineMaleRiskmedicine.medical_specialtyMediterranean diet030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyDiet MediterraneanDecreasing ldllaw.invention03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled triallawInternal medicineMedicineHumansNutsParticle SizeCells CulturedAged030109 nutrition & dieteticsbusiness.industryCholesterolLDL Particle SizeDietary patternMiddle AgedAtherosclerosisPredimedLipoproteins LDLstomatognathic diseasesEndocrinologychemistryCardiovascular Diseaseslipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Femalebusinesshuman activitiesFood ScienceBiotechnologyOlive oil

description

cope Traditional Mediterranean diet (TMD) protects against cardiovascular disease through several mechanisms such as decreasing LDL cholesterol levels. However, evidence regarding TMD effects on LDL atherogenic traits (resistance against oxidation, size, composition, cytotoxicity) is scarce. Methods and results We assessed the effects of a 1-year intervention with a TMD on LDL atherogenic traits in a random sub-sample of individuals from the PREDIMED study (N = 210). We compared two TMDs: one enriched with virgin olive oil (TMD-VOO, N = 71) and another with nuts (TMD-Nuts, N = 68), versus a low-fat control diet (N = 71). After the TMD-VOO intervention, LDL resistance against oxidation increased (+6.46%, p = 0.007), the degree of LDL oxidative modifications decreased (−36.3%, p<0.05), estimated LDL particle size augmented (+3.06%, p = 0.021), and LDL particles became cholesterol-rich (+2.41% p = 0.013) relative to the low-fat control diet. LDL lipoproteins became less cytotoxic for macrophages only relative to baseline (−13.4%, p = 0.019). No significant effects of the TMD-Nuts intervention on LDL traits were observed versus the control diet. Conclusion Adherence to a TMD, particularly when enriched with virgin olive oil, decreased LDL atherogenicity in high cardiovascular risk individuals. The development of less atherogenic LDLs could contribute to explaining some of the cardioprotective benefits of this dietary pattern.

10.1002/mnfr.201601015https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28371298