BEIJING, March 28 (Xinhuanet) -- A recent study in
the United States reveals women with the highest levels of trans fat in their
blood triple their risk of heart disease compared to those with the lowest
levels.
The study, published Wednesday in the journal
Circulation, supports recent efforts to rid the American diet of trans fats.
"Humans cannot synthesize, or create, trans fatty
acid. The only source is through diet," study chief Dr. Frank B. Hu of the
Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, said in a written statement.
The main source of trans fat in the diet is partially
hydrogenated oils that are plentiful in cookies, crackers, pastries and fried
foods.
"Eliminating the use of partially hydrogenated oils
and other sources of trans fat in the U.S. diet -- as long as saturated fat
intake doesn't increase -- will likely help reduce the burden of cardiovascular
disease," Hu said.
Hu and colleagues analyzed blood samples obtained
from 32,826 nurses between 1989 and 1990 as part of a long-term study that
looked at the effect of oral contraceptives, diet and lifestyle on the
development of heart and other diseases.
During six years of follow-up, 166 women developed
heart disease, and these women were matched to 327 healthy control women.
The amount of trans fat in red blood cells correlated
significantly with the amount of trans fat consumed and was associated with
increased levels of "bad" LDL cholesterol and decreased levels of "good" HDL
cholesterol, according to the report.
After adjusting the data for multiple factors that
might influence the results, women with the highest trans fatty acid content in
red blood cells were three times more likely to develop heart disease than women
with the lowest trans fatty acid content in red blood cells.
This study, the authors say, provides further
evidence of the potentially harmful effects of trans fats on heart health.
"Trans fat intake has been substantially reduced in
European countries, whereas intake in the U.S. is still relatively high," said
Hu. "Recent efforts to eliminate trans fats from many foods and even from
restaurant meals in cities such as New York and Philadelphia should have a
beneficial effect on the population as a whole."
(Agencies)