Title: Professor Dag Steinar Thelle University of Oslo
1 ProfessorDag Steinar Thelle University of
Oslo
2Fat and Cardiovascular Diseases October 23, 2008
- Dag S. Thelle
- University of Oslo
3Contents
- A few words about fat and heart disease, the
Dutch, maybe Englishmen and Scottish sheep, - the French, Norwegian fish, and surely Søren
Kierkegaard and how we know what we know
4The basis for our knowledge on fat and heart
disease
- Anecdotal information and observations
- Ecological analyses
- Observational studies, consistencies and
discrepancies - Feeding experiments
- Large scale trials
- A comprehensive diet-heart theory from Virchow to
?
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6Thats what is all about...
- The plaque - why does it occur?
- Why does it rupture?
- It is filled with lipids - fat derived substances
- Highly reactive - inducing inflammatory actions,
thrombosis - Questions that have been around for 150 years...
7Three different theories by the end of the 19th
century
- incrustation theory developed by von Rokitansky
putting most weight upon thrombosis and role of
platelets, - irritation theory from von Virchow with emphasis
on chronic inflammatory processes, - lipid infiltration theory based upon Anitschkovs
and Chalatovs feeding experiments on rabbits
8The unsystematic observations
- The Dutch in Java (de Langen 1907)
- Chicken and Noblemen in Russia (Anitschkow 1905)
9Observation (epidemiological) studies
- Ragnar Nicolaysen (1958-60) total cholesterol
- 3751 men aged 40-49 followed for 10 years, 213
first time MI (Scand Clin Lab Invest suppl 127,
1972). - Similar coefficients for total cholesterol and MI
as in Framingham - Followed by a large number of similar studies
10Ecological studies Seven Countries, Keys et al
1980
11CHD in 40 Countries in Relation to Milk Intake,
Artaud et al, Circulation 1993
12Association between fat and TC
- Hegsteds formula, followed by a number of similar
formulas
13Nutritional guidelines
- American Heart Assocations 1970s
- World Health Organisation 1970s
- Nutrition policy- across Europe 1980s
14The Truth
- To whom is anyting true?
- Three scientists in Scotland...
15The 25 year follow-up of the Seven Countries
Study - fats and CHD, Kromhout 1995
- Total fat
- C120, lauric acid
- C140, myristic acid
- C160, palmitic acid
- C180, stearic acid
- C181C, oleic acid
- 0.60
- 0.84
- 0.86
- 0.81
- 0.84
- -0.08
- plt 0.05
16A causal theory should explain
- Acute events
- Long term evolution or pathogenesis
- Rapid changes in CVD and CHD incidence rates
- One single factor (and fat is many!) will not do
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18The exceptions to the pattern
- Inuites (Greenland) low CHD, but high on omega -
3 fatty acids Bang, Dyerberg and Sinclair in
1976
19The exceptions to the pattern
- Inuites (Greenland) low CHD, but high on omega -
3 fatty acids Bang, Dyerberg and Sinclair in
1976 - Crete - low CHD, high total fat intake - mainly
monounsaturated fatty acids (oliveoil), Katan et
al 1988
20Metabolic experiments- substitution for saturated
fat , Mensink Katan 1987
- Carbohydrates
- Total cholesterol -down
- LDL cholesterol - down
- HDL cholesterol - down
- Triglycerides - up
- Monounsaturated
- Total cholesterol - flat
- LDL cholesterol - down
- HDL cholesterol - up
- Triglycerides - flat
21The exceptions to the pattern
- Inuites (Greenland) low CHD, but high on omega -
3 fatty acids Bang, Dyerberg and Sinclair in
1976 - Crete - low CHD, high total fat intake - mainly
monounsaturated fatty acids (oliveoil), Katan et
al 1988 - Masaii people in Kenya, high dairy products, no
CHD (but they walk and run 20 km/day)
22The Trans Fat Story
- Paul Sabatier develops the hydrogenation
process. French chemist, - Nobel laureate in 1912.
23The Trans Fat Story
- Paul Sabatier develops the hydrogenation
process. French chemist, - Nobel laureate in 1912.
- Used for margarine and shortenings- cheaper than
butter - 1950s increasing amounts used in Norway- 3kg
per personyear
24The Trans Fatty Acid Controversy
- The EURAMIC study - ten centres in Europe from
Russia to Spain, 671 cases v. 717 controls - Fat biopsies, OR 0.97 (95 CI 0.56-1.67), but
the variation in TFA between centres is
considerable - Aro et al, Lancet 1995
25Trans fatty acids
- ..replacing saturated and trans unsaturated fats
with unhydrogenated monounsaturated and
polyunsaturated fats is more effective in
preventing coronary heart disease in women than
reducing overall fat intake. - Hu et al NEJM 1997
26Animal studies
- Rats on hardened fish oils showed declining total
cholesterol levels but - rats differ from humans most of the cholesterol
is HDL-C
27Epidemiological Research Strategies
- An example from Norway 112 cases acute MI, 107
controls, Pedersen et al, Eur J Clin Nutr 2000 - Fat biopsies - fatty acids, dietary information
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29Different dietary effects
- Butter, C140, LDL
- Meat, beef C160, LDL
- Cocoa butter C180, LDL flat
- Trans fatty acids LDL
HDL
down - Coffee diterpenes (cafestol) LDL
- Genetic constitution (heritability appr. 35-50)
-
30Some dietary intervention trials
- Open populations
- Oslo Study 1972-77 effect
- Göteborg 1972 no effect
- WHO factory trial no effect
- Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial 1973 no
effect
31Some dietary intervention trials
- Closed populations
- Helsinki mental hospital study 1979- a
cross-over dietary trial - The Lyon Diet Heart Study CHD patients
32The source matters
- Milk consumption is associated with decreased CHD
risk? - Cheese?
- Fermentation?
- Effects on inflammation?
33A few words about the French and the cholesterol-
saturated fat index
- CSI(1.01 x g saturated fat) (0.05 x mg
cholesterol) - Correlation 0.78 with CHD mortality, but France
has a high CSI and low CHD mortality - They get their fat from other sources than the
rest of us...
34So, where do we stand?
- Total fat is not the main issue
- Trans-fatty acids increase the CHD risk
- Myristic, palmitic and lauric acids increase the
total cholesterol and most likely CHD risk - The risk may be modified by anti-oxidants - but
this is still a hypothesis (not shown in vivo)
35So, where do we stand?
- The effect of omega- 3 supplementation is not
established - The use of oily fish is recommended
- The use of oleic acid is recommended
- Trans fatty acids should be banned
36Fat and CHD - are related, but
- the exposure is heterogeneous different fatty
acids with differing biological properties - and endpoints are a number of phenotypical
variations with similar clinical
manifestationsand may have different etiology.
37Increasing life expectancy (Oeppen Vaupel,
Science 20022961029-1031)
The CHD epidemic
The Flu
38Any scientific truth has a limited life span
- Life is understood by its past, and lived into
the future (Søren Kierkegaard)