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Atherosclerosis and Lipoproteins |
From the Department of Internal Medicine (R.B.W., B.S.V., R.A.A.), Section of Gastroenterology, the General Clinical Research Center (J.E.S.), and the Department of Biochemistry (M.J.T.), Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.
AbstractDietary
polyunsaturated fats and vitamin E are associated with reduced risk for
atherosclerosis, but in smokers, they could promote
lipid oxidation. Therefore, we examined the effects of a high
polyunsaturated fat diet and vitamin E supplementation on measures of
lipid oxidation in cigarette smokers. Ten subjects who smoked >1 pack
of cigarettes per day were sequentially fed the following: a baseline
diet in which the major fat source was olive oil, a diet in which the
major fat source was high-linoleic safflower oil, and finally, the
safflower oil diet plus 800 IU vitamin E per day. LDL oxidation lag
time and rate and plasma total F2-isoprostanes
and prostaglandin F2
(PGF2
) were determined after 3 weeks on each
diet. The safflower oil diet increased total
F2-isoprostanes from 53.0±7.2 to 116.2±11.2
nmol/L and PGF2
from 3.5±0.2 to 5.5±0.5
nmol/L, without changing LDL oxidation parameters. Addition
of vitamin E prolonged mean LDL oxidation lag time but, paradoxically,
further increased F2-isoprostanes to 188.2±10.9
nmol/L and PGF2
to 7.8±0.4 nmol/L. These
data suggest that vitamin E may function as a pro-oxidant in cigarette
smokers consuming a high polyunsaturated fat
diet.
Key Words: LDL lipid oxidation antioxidants
-tocopherol F2-isoprostanes
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