| Fatty Diet May Affect Children's Growth
Process
01/16/03 - Researchers studying the effects of fatty
diets on puppies say their results could help further
understanding of how these fats contribute to aging
and development of human diseases such as atherosclerosis
and cancer.
Scientists at Purdue University in the US fed one group
of dogs a highly-oxidized lipid diet and another group
with a moderate level of this fat type. Both had reduced
growth, bone formation and immune function, said John
Turek, Purdue professor of basic sciences.
"We know that eating diets high in oxidized fat
contributes to atherosclerosis and other diseases in
people," said Turek, "but we don't know the
long-term effects of foods high in oxidized lipids fed
during the growth stage. Will organ and tissue growth
be compromised? Will children develop geriatric diseases
at an earlier point in their lives?"
Results showing that dogs on a moderate oxidized fat
diet also exhibited some of the same effects as those
eating meals containing high oxidized lipids were unexpected,
Turek said. This finding has major significance for
studies on overall health in both people and animals,
the researchers report in the January issue of The Journal
of Nutritional Biochemistry.
They added that fats, oils and processed foods without
added antioxidants can contain oxidized lipids. In addition,
frying food adds more of this type of fat. With people
eating more convenience and fast-food, often prepared
by frying, the level of oxidized fat in the modern diet
has escalated alarmingly in recent years.
The process that forms oxidized lipids also occurs
in the body's metabolic processes. Free radicals, a
component of lipid oxidation, damages proteins, other
lipids, DNA and cells, thereby causing disease. This
is why foods, such as fresh fruits and vegetables, which
are low in oxidized lipids and high in antioxidants,
are important, according to the team.
Though researchers have linked oxidized fat to several
human diseases, most of the research was done in rodents.
The Purdue team suggested that young, growing dogs might
give a better picture of how oxidized lipids affect
humans, especially children during critical stages of
development and growth. In the early months of life,
dogs grow rapidly, adding considerable bone and lean
body mass, which is more comparable to humans in rapid
growth phases, such as puberty.
The 24 dogs, all two months old, were divided into
three groups. One group ate a low-oxidized fat diet,
one a diet with a moderate level of oxidized fat, and
one a high oxidized fat diet. They were all kept on
their assigned feeding regimen for 16 weeks. Other than
the oxidation level of the fat, their diets were identical
and contained all the other nutrients necessary for
a healthy dog.
In the puppies, researchers found that those consuming
highly oxidized fat gained less weight and had less
body fat than those that ate moderate- and low-oxidized
fat diets. The coonhounds on the diet high in oxidized
fat also had decreased immune function and less vitamin
E, an antioxidant that helps counteract the effects
of free radicals. In addition, bone formation rate was
reduced.
"Our study shows the need to control the amount
of oxidized fats in food for both humans and companion
animals so that we can ensure proper growth and optimum
health," Turek said.
The oxidized lipid research is one of the ongoing projects
by members of the Center for Enhancing Foods to Protect
Health, a collaboration between Purdue and the Indiana
University School of Medicine. The Iams Company Research
and Development Fund funded the research.
http://www.nutraingredients.com/news/news.asp?id=6230
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
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