Linoleate-Rich High-Fat Diet Decreases Mortality in Hypertensive Heart Failure Rats Compared With Lard and Low-Fat Diets
- 1 September 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 52 (3) , 549-555
- https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.108.114264
Abstract
Recent studies indicate that high-fat diets may attenuate cardiac hypertrophy and contractile dysfunction in chronic hypertension. However, it is unclear whether consuming a high-fat diet improves prognosis in aged individuals with advanced hypertensive heart disease or the extent to which differences in its fatty acid composition modulate its effects in this setting. In this study, aged spontaneously hypertensive heart failure rats were administered a standard high-carbohydrate diet or high-fat diet (42% of kilocalories) supplemented with high-linoleate safflower oil or lard until death to determine their effects on disease progression and mortality. Both high-fat diets attenuated cardiac hypertrophy, left ventricular chamber dilation, and systolic dysfunction observed in rats consuming the high-carbohydrate diet. However, the lard diet significantly hastened heart failure mortality compared with the high-carbohydrate diet, whereas the linoleate diet significantly delayed mortality. Both high-fat diets e...Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Low-Intensity Exercise Training Delays Heart Failure and Improves Survival in Female Hypertensive Heart Failure RatsHypertension, 2008
- Dietary fatty acids and cardiovascular disease: An epidemiological approachProgress in Lipid Research, 2008
- Potential impact of carbohydrate and fat intake on pathological left ventricular hypertrophyCardiovascular Research, 2007
- Low Carbohydrate/High-Fat Diet Attenuates Cardiac Hypertrophy, Remodeling, and Altered Gene Expression in HypertensionHypertension, 2006
- Barth syndrome, a human disorder of cardiolipin metabolismFEBS Letters, 2006
- Dietary Fat Intake and Proinflammatory Cytokine Levels in Patients With Heart FailureJournal of Cardiac Failure, 2005
- Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor ?? and Hypertensive Heart DiseaseDrugs, 2004
- Beneficial effect(s) of n-3 fatty acids in cardiovascular diseases: but, why and how?Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes & Essential Fatty Acids, 2000
- Dietary Fat Intake and the Risk of Coronary Heart Disease in WomenNew England Journal of Medicine, 1997
- Influence of linoleic acid on desaturation and uptake of deuterium-labeled palmitic and stearic acids in humansBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1993