Authors
Frank B Hu, JoAnn E Manson, Walter C Willett
Publication date
2001/2/1
Source
Journal of the American college of Nutrition
Volume
20
Issue
1
Pages
5-19
Publisher
Routledge
Description
During the past several decades, reduction in fat intake has been the main focus of national dietary recommendations to decrease risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). Several lines of evidence, however, have indicated that types of fat have a more important role in determining risk of CHD than total amount of fat in the diet. Metabolic studies have long established that the type of fat, but not total amount of fat, predicts serum cholesterol levels. In addition, results from epidemiologic studies and controlled clinical trials have indicated that replacing saturated fat with unsaturated fat is more effective in lowering risk of CHD than simply reducing total fat consumption. Moreover, prospective cohort studies and secondary prevention trials have provided strong evidence that an increasing intake of n-3 fatty acids from fish or plant sources substantially lowers risk of cardiovascular mortality. In this article, we review evidence …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FB Hu, JAE Manson, WC Willett - Journal of the American college of Nutrition, 2001