Home Cardiology No Quick Fix in Cardiac Fat Metabolism From Calorie Cuts

No Quick Fix in Cardiac Fat Metabolism From Calorie Cuts

Restriction of calories, saturated fat did not correct myocardial DFA metabolism in IGT individuals

WEDNESDAY, Aug. 5, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Seven-day caloric and saturated fat restriction was found to increase myocardial dietary fatty acid (DFA) partitioning in individuals with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), according to research published online July 29 in Diabetes.

Christophe Noll, Ph.D., of the Université de Sherbrooke in Canada, and colleagues compared the effects of a seven-day hypocaloric (−500 kcal/d), low saturated fat (<7 percent of energy) diet (LOWCAL) with an isocaloric, usual saturated fat (approximately 10 percent of energy) diet (ISOCAL) on DFA metabolism in a randomized, crossover study in 15 individuals with IGT. Organ-specific DFA partitioning and cardiac and hepatic DFA fractional uptake rates were measured using oral 18-fluoro-6-thiaheptadecanoic acid positron emission tomography.

The researchers found that the LOWCAL diet led to reductions in weight and postprandial insulin area under the curve. After LOWCAL, myocardial DFA partitioning over six hours was increased (2.3 ± 0.1 versus 1.9 ± 0.2 standard uptake value; P < 0.04). Myocardial DFA fractional uptake at 90 to 120 minutes was unchanged (0.055 ± 0.025 versus 0.046 ± 0.009 min−1; P = 0.7). Hepatic DFA partitioning was unchanged, but hepatic DFA fractional uptake tended to increase.

“Very short-term caloric and saturated fat dietary restriction does not lead to the same changes in organ-specific DFA metabolism than those associated with weight loss in IGT,” the authors write.

One study author holds a position funded by a donation from GlaxoSmithKline to the Université de Sherbrooke.

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