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June 7, 2005
Plant
Sterol Levels in Blood and Artery Plaques are Linked
Study
raises questions about food products meant to block cholesterol
absorption
(BETHESDA, MD)Plant sterols, which are naturally found
in many foods but are also added to some foods intended to inhibit
cholesterol absorption, are present in artery plaques, according
to a new study in the June 7, 2005,
issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.
“This
study shows that plant sterols, which occur in our food, are
absorbed to a small degree. They are found in blood serum
and enter into plaques in arteries in the same proportion
as cholesterol in the blood serum. It is totally unknown whether
they have anything to do with development of arterial plaques
or whether the health risks are coupled with cholesterol only,”
said Tatu A. Miettinen, M.D., Ph.D., at the University of
Helsinki in Finland.
Certain
foods with high levels of plant sterols are considered to
be “heart healthy” because they partially block
absorption of cholesterol, thereby reducing levels of LDL
“bad” cholesterol. Some brands of margarines and
juices that are supplemented with plant sterols are marketed
as beneficial to heart health because of their ability to
reduce cholesterol levels. However, it is not known whether
absorbing high levels of plant sterols in place of cholesterol
has any effect on health.
This
study is the first of its kind in living patients that directly
measured levels of plant sterols and cholesterol in blood
serum and artery plaques. The researchers studied 25 consecutive
patients who were undergoing carotid endarterectomy procedures
to remove plaques clogging the carotid arteries.
“The
major new observation of the present study was that the higher
the ratio of the dietary absorption sterol (cholestanol, campesterol,
sitosterol and avenasterol) to serum cholesterol, the higher
the ratio was also in the carotid artery wall,” the
authors wrote.
Ira
Tabas, M.D., Ph.D., at Columbia University, who was not connected
with this study, called it fascinating research that raises
questions about the possibility of direct atherogenic effects
of plant sterols, but he said that these results should not
alarm people.
“There
are many components in plants that are highly beneficial,
so you don’t want to give the message that people shouldn’t
eat plants,” Dr. Tabas said.
He
pointed out that if the results had been different and researchers
had not found plant sterols in the artery plaque of patients
with high blood serum levels, then the idea that they could
have a role in promoting plaques would have seemed unlikely.
However, the results of this study leave the door open to
the possibility that plant sterols somehow affect one or more
processes related to plaque development and other aspects
of atherosclerosis.
“Until
we are able to determine one way or the other whether these
plant sterols are directly atherogenetic and whether or not
these products could be doing harm in some people, we don’t
want to set off any waves of panic. It’s purely speculative
at this point. But it certainly raises the question, and so
it deserves further exploration,” Dr. Tabas said.
Richard
V. Milani, M.D., F.A.C.C., at the Ochsner Heart and Vascular
Institute in New Orleans, who also was not connected with
this study, said it is important to keep the findings in perspective.
He said while the results are important to researchers, the
meaning for people who eat plant sterols to lower LDL cholesterol
is not yet known.
“We
can’t draw any conclusions from this. This isn’t
an article meant to give the public an answer. This is just
bringing up more questions. It’s a good paper, but again,
it’s hypothesis-generating. We don’t know that
having a higher level of plant sterols in the blood or in
the plaque is necessarily bad. There’s no simple take-home
message for the public here,” Dr. Milani said.
The
American College of Cardiology, a 31,000-member nonprofit
professional medical society and teaching institution, is
dedicated to fostering optimal cardiovascular care and disease
prevention through professional education, promotion of research,
leadership in the development of standards and guidelines,
and the formulation of health care policy.
The
American College of Cardiology (ACC) provides these new reports
of clinical studies published in the Journal of the American
College of Cardiology as a service to physicians, the media,
the public, and other interested parties. However, statements
or opinions expressed in these reports reflect the view of
the author(s) and do not represent official policy of the
ACC unless stated so. |