Blood pressure in spontaneously hypertensive rats fed butterfat, corn oil, or fish oil.
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 14 (6) , 674-679
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.14.6.674
Abstract
Dietary fats have been shown to influence blood pressure in humans and animal models of hypertension. The ability of a particular fat to modulate arterial pressure appears to depend on its fatty acid profile rather than its degree of saturation or unsaturation. Little is known about the effects of specific dietary fats of animal origin on blood pressure. We tested the concurrent effects of both calcium and dietary fat on blood pressure development in the spontaneously hypertensive rat. Sixty animals were fed diets containing butterfat, fish oil, or corn oil from 3-26 weeks of age. Each diet among the three oils was further modified to contain either 0.25% or 2.0% of the diet as calcium. All six diets provided 18% of the diet (36% of the calories) as fat. The polyunsaturated-to-saturated fat ratio was 0.07, 0.84, and 4.54 for butterfat, fish oil, and corn oil, respectively. Fish oil consumption resulted in lower blood pressures compared with butterfat (p less than 0.036) or corn oil (p less than 0.0009). Similarly, butterfat feeding resulted in lower blood pressures when compared with corn oil (p less than 0.054). Supplementing the diet with calcium decreased blood pressure in both the butterfat and corn oil diets. When butterfat diets were supplemented with calcium, the resulting blood pressures did not differ significantly from those obtained with the two fish oil diets. It is concluded that butterfat, though highly saturated, is associated with less of an increase in the spontaneously hypertensive rat's blood pressure than is corn oil, which is highly unsaturated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of dietary fats and carbohydrate on blood pressure of mildly hypertensive patients.Hypertension, 1987
- The effect of dietary polyunsaturated fat on cation transport and hypertension in the ratBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1986
- Nutrient Intake, Blood Pressure, Serum and Urinary Prostaglandins and Serum Thromboxane B2 in a Controlled Trial with a Lacto-Ovo-Vegetarian DietJournal Of Hypertension, 1986
- EFFECT OF SALT LOADING ON BLOOD PRESSURE AND EICOSANOID METABOLISM OF SPONTANEOUSLY HYPERTENSIVE RATS FED A FISH OIL ENRICHED DIETClinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology, 1986
- The effects of hydrogenated coconut oil, safflower oil, and evening primrose oil on development of hypertension and sodium handling in spontaneously hypertensive ratsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1985
- Effect of Dietary Fats on Experimental HypertensionAnnals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 1985
- Physiological Effects of Varying Dietary Linoleic Acid in Spontaneously Hypertensive RatsAnnals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 1982
- Effect of Polyunsaturate-Rich Vegetable Oils on Blood Pressure in Essential HypertensionClinical and Experimental Hypertension, 1981
- Platelet functions and fatty acid composition of platelet phospholipids in spontaneously hypertensive rats fed saturated or polyunsaturated fatsAtherosclerosis, 1981
- Reduction in blood pressure associated with high polyunsaturated fat diets that reduce blood cholesterol in manPreventive Medicine, 1975