Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room...

93
Chapter 6: Lipids

Transcript of Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room...

Page 1: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Chapter 6: Lipids

Page 2: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Properties of Lipids

• Do not readily dissolve in water

• Fats are solid at room temperature

• Oils are liquid at room temperature

Page 3: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Functions of Lipids

• Provide energy• Satiety• Flavor and mouth feel• Insulation• Protect internal organs• Transport fat-soluble vitamins• Efficient storage of energy

– 80% lipid, 20% protein and water

Page 4: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Triglycerides

• Triglycerides are the main form of lipids in food and body (storage)

• Energy dense (9 kcal /g)

Page 5: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Triglycerides

Glycerol + 3 FA’s Triglyceride + 3 H20

H

H--C--OH

H--C--OH

H--C--OH

H

O

HO-C-R

O

HO-C-R

O

HO-C-R

+

H O

H--C--O--C--

O

H--C--O--C--

O

H--C--O--C--

H

R + H2O

R + H20

R + H20

Page 6: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Text art 06_02

Page 7: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

7

Structure

• Esterification– Joining 3 fatty acids to a glycerol unit

• De-esterification– Release of fatty acids-results in free fatty acids

• Diglyceride– Loss of one fatty acid

• Monoglyceride– Loss of two fatty acids

Page 8: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Structure of Fatty Acids

• Fatty acids– Function is dependent on:

• Length• Degree of saturation• Location of double bonds• Configuration/Shape

– Glycerol backbone

Page 9: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Fatty Acid Chain Length

• Long chain FA: > 12 Carbons– Predominant in food (meats, fish)

• Medium chain FA: 6 - 10 Carbons– Account for ~4-10% of all FA

• Short chain FA: < 6 Carbons – Found in dairy products

Page 10: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Saturated Fatty Acid

Page 11: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Monounsaturated Fatty Acid

Page 12: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid

Page 13: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Location of Double Bonds

• Omega System– Double bond closest to omega (methyl) end– Omega: refers to the last carbon (methyl

group)– Omega 6 vs Omega 3 fatty acids

• Delta (alpha) System– Uses the carboxyl end and indicates location

for all double bonds

Page 14: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Fatty Acid Structure

omega end alpha end

H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H O

H-C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C--C-C-OH

H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H

Page 15: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Fatty Acid Nomenclature

Page 16: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Configuration/Shape

• cis versus trans

Page 17: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Common Fatty AcidsNAME STRUCTURE PROPERTIES Acetic acid 2:0 Formed from glucose and amino acid degradation Propionic acid 3:0 Formed from odd-chain fatty acids and branched-

chain amino acids Butyric acid 4:0 Found in cows’ milk and butter Decanoic acid 10:0 Major fatty acid in milk triglycerides Palmitic acid 16:0 End product of fatty acid synthesis in most tissues Stearic acid 18:0 Major fatty acid in gangliosides Oleic acid 18:1 (∆9) Lowers plasma LDL when substituted for

saturated fatty acids Linoleic acid 18:2 (∆9,12) Essential fatty acid and precursor of Arachidonic

acid Linolenic acid 18:3 (∆9,12,15) Essential fatty acid Arachidonic acid 20:4 (∆5,8,11,14) Precursor of most eicosanoids

Page 18: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Saturated Fatty Acids

• Fatty acids with no double bonds• Solid at room temperature• Animal fats:

– Dairy: cheeses, ice cream, whole milk– Meat: beef, pork, lamb,– Plant/tropical oils (cottonseed, coconut)

• Stearic, lauric, myristic, palmitic

Page 19: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Saturated Fatty Acid

Page 20: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Trans Fatty Acids

• Essentially a saturated fat

• Raise LDL• Lower HDL

• Intake has increased dramatically – Found in margarine, cookies, potato chips, snack

chips, onion rings

• Current intake is~3% of total kcals

risk for heart disease

Page 21: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Hydrogenation of Fatty Acids

• Process used to solidify an oil

• Addition of hydrogen to an unsaturated fatty acid (eliminating the double bond—making it into a saturated fatty acid)

• Trans fatty acids are a by product of hydrogenation

• How can we limit intake of these?

Page 22: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Figure 06_07

Page 23: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Trans Fatty Acid

Page 24: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Food Labels

• % Daily Value on Nutrition Facts label is sum of trans and saturated fatty acids

• Quantity of trans fatty acids

• “Trans fat free” has no more than 0.5 g each of trans or saturated fat

• Read the food label and look for hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils, or trans fatty acids

Page 25: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Trans Fatty Acids

Page 26: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Monounsaturated Fatty Acids• One double bond

• Oleic acid (Omega 9)

• Olive oil, canola oil, nuts

• Rate of CHD low in Mediterranean countries where diet is rich in olive oil

• Diet high in MUFA equivalent to low-fat diet in ↓ LDL-C, but does not ↓ HDL-C

Page 27: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Monounsaturated Fatty Acid

Page 28: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids

• 2 or more double bonds

• Provides essential fatty acids (EFAs)– Omega 3– Omega 6

• Properties differ between these EFAs

Page 29: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid

Page 30: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Figure 06_11

Page 31: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Essential Fatty Acids

• Polyunsaturated fatty acids• Body can only make double bonds after

the 9th carbon from the omega end• • Needed for

– immune function– vision– cell membranes– production of hormone-like compounds

Page 32: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

32

Essential Fatty Acid Needs

• Adequate Intake– Approximately 2-4 Tablespoons daily

• Deficiency– Unlikely

• Toxicity– No upper level set

Page 33: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Omega-3 Fatty Acids

• Linolenic acid (α-linolenic acid)

• Forms eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)

• Metabolized to form eicosanoids

Page 34: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 35: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Omega-3 Fatty Acids

• Consumption of large amounts of omega-3 fatty acids decreases the ability of blood to clot

• May:– Prevent stroke and heart attacks caused by

clots (thrombosis)– Reduce risk of stroke caused by blood clots– Help some chronic inflammatory conditions

• Asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis

Page 36: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Omega-3 Fatty Acids– Recommend intake of ~2 servings of fish/wk– Shellfish

– Cold water/fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, sardines, tuna)

• Consumption of canola or olive oil vs. other plant oils

• Flaxseed oil– 2 tbsp per day

• Fish oil capsules– 900 mg per day– Avoid: if have a history of bleeding

disorder, on blood thinners

Page 37: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Omega-6 Fatty Acids

• Linoleic acid

• Forms arachidonic acid

• Metabolized to eicosanoids

• Found in vegetable oils– Corn, sunflower, safflower, soybean oils, nuts,

seeds, wheat germ

• Only need ~ 1 tablespoon a day

Page 38: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 39: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Eicosanoids

• A group of hormone-like compounds

• By-pass the blood stream and work in the area of origin

• Regulators of:– Blood pressure– Clotting– Immune responses– Inflammatory responses– Stomach secretions

• Prostaglandins, thromboxanes, leukotrienes, prostacyclins, lipoxins

Page 40: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Eicosanoids Have Different Effects

• Omega-3 eicosanoids, DHA, EPA – ↓ blood clotting– ↓ inflammatory responses– Reduce heart attack– Excess may cause hemorrhagic stroke

• Omega-6 eicosanoids; Arachidonic acid– ↑blood clotting– ↑ inflammatory responses

• Eicosanoids have different effects on different tissues

Page 41: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 42: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

American Heart Association Recommendations

• Total fat: <30% of total calories

• Saturated fat: <10% of total calories

• Monounsaturated fat: 10% of total calories

• Polyunsaturated fat: 10% of total calories

• Cholesterol: <300 mg/day

Page 43: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

43

Phospholipids

• Hydrophobic and Hydrophillic Ends

• Functions– Component of cell membranes– Eicosanoid synthesis– Emulsifier

• Allows fats/lipids to be dispersed in water– Bile acids

• Sources– Synthesized by the body as needed– Built on a glycerol backbone

• At least one fatty acid replaced with phosphorus compound– Food: egg yolks (lecithin), wheat germ and peanuts

Page 44: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Emulsifier

Hydrophilic end (attracts water)

Hydrophobic end (attracts lipid)

Page 45: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

45

Page 46: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

46

Sterols

• Multi-ringed structure, most known is cholesterol

• Functions– Bile acids, cell membranes– Precursor of steroid hormones, sex

hormones, adrenal hormones, Vitamin D

• Sources– Synthesized by the liver– Food: animal origin

Page 47: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 48: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipid Digestion

• Mouth– Lingual lipase (inactive until reaches stomach)

• Stomach– Gastric lipase (digests primarily SCFAs)– Muscular contractions mix fat with digestive

enzymes– Fats generally remain in stomach 2-4 hours

Page 49: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipid Digestion

• Small intestine– Cholecystokinin (CCK) and Secretin

• Released due to presence of fat in duodenum

• CCK stimulates release of– Pancreatic lipase– Bile (to help emulsify fat)

• Secretin stimulates release of – Bicarbonate

» Raises pH for activation of lipases

Page 50: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Bile• Composed of bile acids, bile pigments,

phospholipids (lecithin)

• Synthesized from cholesterol in the liver

• Function is to emulsify fat – Allows fat to be suspended in watery digestive juices– Large fat globules broken down to smaller ones,

surface area for lipase action increases – Micelles are formed

Page 51: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Bile

• Once used for emulsification, can go through 1 of 2 routes:

– Reabsorbed in small intestine and recycled– Binds to fiber in large intestine and excreted

• This is how fiber (in particular soluble fiber) helps lower blood cholesterol levels

Page 52: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Enterohepatic Circulation

Page 53: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

End Products of Lipid Digestion• Glycerol

• Fatty acids

• Cholesterol

• Lecithin

Page 54: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipid Absorption

• Micelles– Emulsified fat droplets– Absorbed across intestinal mucosal cells by diffusion

• Distal duodenum, jejunum

• End products of dietary lipid digestion– Repackaged into chylomicrons– Released into lymph system

• Bile salts absorbed in the ileum– Returned to liver via portal vein to be reused – “Enterohepatic circulation”

Page 55: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

EmulsificationEmulsification

Page 56: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 57: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipid Transport

• Water (blood) and oil (fat) are incompatible

• Unique system of fat transportation needed for lipids to travel in bloodstream

Page 58: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipid Transport

• Lipoproteins– Transport lipids through bloodstream– Composed of:

• Triglycerides, protein, phospholipids, cholesterol

– 4 different types• Chylomicrons• VLDL (Very-low density lipoprotein) • LDL (Low density lipoprotein)• HDL (High density lipoprotein)

Page 59: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipoprotein

Page 60: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Chylomicrons

• Large in size

• Triglyceride–rich (80-90% TG)

• Transport dietary (exogenous) fat to cells– High blood concentrations following a meal

• Transported via lymph system, enter bloodstream at thoracic duct

Page 61: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Chylomicrons

• Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) breaks down TGs in chylos

• Fatty acids are absorbed by cells (muscle, adipose, etc.)

• Chylomicron remnants removed by the liver, broken down, and repackaged into VLDL– At this point, fats are considered ENDOGENOUS

• 2-10 hours to clear from bloodstream

Page 62: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Dietary Fat Absorption

Page 63: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Very-Low Density Lipoproteins• Triglyceride-rich (55-65%)

• Transports endogenous fats to cells– Lipids synthesized in liver

• Released from liver into bloodstream

Page 64: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Very-Low Density Lipoproteins• Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) breaks down TGs in VLDL

• Fatty acids are absorbed by cells (muscle, adipose, etc.)

• VLDL remnants are removed by liver, broken down, and repackaged into LDL

• 10-12 hours to clear from bloodstream

Page 65: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Low Density Lipoproteins

• Cholesterol-rich (45%)

• Transports cholesterol synthesized by liver

• Removed from bloodstream via receptors (or scavenger pathway)– Receptors down-regulated with high saturated/trans

fatty acid diet

• 2-3 days to clear from bloodstream

Page 66: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Low Density Lipoproteins

Optimal <100 mg/dl

Factors that raise LDL

• High saturated fat diet

• Diet high in trans fatty acids

• Low fiber diet

• Sedentary lifestyle

Page 67: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

High Density Lipoproteins

• Protein rich (45-50%)• Synthesized by liver and intestine• Picks up cholesterol from dying cells and

other sources• Transfer cholesterol to other lipoproteins

for transport to liver for excretion• HDL can also transfer directly back to the

liver

Page 68: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Benefits of High HDL• Removes cholesterol from blood

• May block oxidation of LDL

• Reduces risk of heart disease

• Pre-menopausal women have higher HDL

Page 69: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

High Density Lipoproteins

Desirable >60 mg/dl

Factors that raise HDL Low saturated fat dietReplacing saturated fats with Mono - unsaturated fatsExercise

45 minutes 4 times a weekLosing excess weight, if overweight

Moderateoderate amount of alcohol

Page 70: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipoproteins

Page 71: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Composition of Lipoproteins

Page 72: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Metabolism of Lipids

• Fatty acids, monoglycerides and other lipids taken up by tissue cells

• Can be used in 1 of 4 ways:– Immediate source of energy– Energy storage (adipose)– Incorporation into cell membranes– Used as raw material for synthesis of

essential compounds (cholesterol)

Page 73: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipids as an Energy Source

• Hormone sensitive lipase (HSL)– Enzyme found in liver and adipose tissue

– Key enzyme for lipolysis of stored fat

– Insulin inhibits HSL (inhibits lipolysis)– Glucagon activates HSL (leads to lipolysis)

Page 74: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Lipids as Stored Energy

• Unlimited capacity for fat storage

• Lipoprotein lipase (LPL)– Located in adipose and muscle cells– Facilitates uptake of FA from blood– Excess energy intake

LPL synthesis fat stored in adipose

Page 75: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Health Implications of Fat

• Cardiovascular disease– Major cause of morbidity and mortality in US– >500,000 people die every year– ~1.5 million Americans have a heart attack every year

• Obesity– Fat is a concentrated source of calories– Abdominal fat associated with risk for DM and HTN

• Cancer– High fat diet associated with certain forms of cancer

Page 76: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Heart Disease• Cardiovascular Disease (CVD)

– Disease of the heart and blood vessels

• Coronary Heart Disease (CHD)– Damage that occurs when blood vessels carrying blood to the

heart (the coronary arteries) become narrow and occluded– Leading cause of death in US

• Myocardial infarction (MI)– Accounts for ~50% of CVD deaths– Major underlying cause is atherosclerosis

Page 77: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Development of CHD• When blood flow via coronary arteries is interrupted

• Heart attack (myocardial infarction) may result leading to– Irreversible damage to heart muscle– Irregular heart beat or stopped heartbeat– 25% of people do not survive their 1st MI

• Cerebrovascular accident (CVA) or stroke – When blood flow to part of brain is interrupted causing

part of brain to die

Page 78: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Myocardial Infarction (MI)

Page 79: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Signs of a Heart Attack

• Intense, prolonged chest pain• Shortness of breath• Sweating• Nausea and vomiting• Dizziness• Weakness• Jaw, neck, shoulder pain• Irregular heartbeat

Page 80: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Risk Factors for Heart Disease

Modifiable• Smoking• Hyperlipidemia

– Total Chol >200 mg/dL– Low HDL-C <35 mg/dL– Hight LDL-C

• Obesity• HTN• Physical Inactivity• Diabetes Mellitus

Non-Modifiable• Age

– Male >45– Female >55

• Male gender• Family history of CHD

Page 81: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Other Risk Factors• Serum Homocysteine

– Amino acid– High level in blood associated with increased

risk of MI– Causes damage to blood vessel wall

• Reduce blood level by:– Increasing folate, B6 and B12 intake

• Fruits, vegetables, etc.

Page 82: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Other Risk Factors

• C-Reactive Protein (CRP)– Acute phase protein that increases during systemic

inflammation– Levels in blood increase during inflammation– Biochemical marker for CVD

Page 83: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, Adult Treatment Panel III Guidelines for

CHD (2001)

LDL Cholesterol <100 Optimal 100-129 Near optimal 130-159 Borderline high 160-189 High >190 Very high Total Cholesterol <200 Desirable 200-239 Borderline high >240 High HDL Cholesterol <40 Low >60 High

Page 84: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Reduce Your Risk (Primary Prevention)

• ↓ dietary saturated fat, trans fatty acid, and cholesterol

• ↑ MUFA and PUFA to recommended amounts• ↑ dietary fiber• Maintain healthy weight• Don’t smoke• Alcohol in moderation• Folate intake• Low glycemic index load

Page 85: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Secondary Prevention (After a Heart Attack)

• Primary prevention techniques

• Medication

• Megadoses of vitamin E (400-800 IU/day)

Page 86: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes

• Total Fat 25-35% of total kcals

• SFA <7% of total kcals

• MUFA Up to 20% “ “

• PUFA Up to 10% “ “

• CHO 50-60% of “ “

• Protein 10-20% of “ “

• Cholesterol <200 mg/d

• Fiber 20-30 g/d

Page 87: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Therapeutic Lifestyle Changes

• Other recommendations:– Plant stanols/sterols

• 2 g/d

– Kcals• To maintain optimal weight, prevent weight gain

– Physical activity• Expend at least 200 kcal/d

Page 88: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Medical Therapy

• Statin drugs– Lipitor, Zocor, Mevacor, etc.– Successful in reducing blood cholesterol

• Benecol and Take Control– Plant stanol ester– Cholesterol-lowering effect– Compete with cholesterol in the micelle and reduce

absorption of dietary cholesterol

Page 89: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Medical Therapy

• Surgical Intervention– Angioplasty– Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG)

Page 90: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Angioplasty

Page 91: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

Stent placement

Page 92: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.
Page 93: Chapter 6: Lipids. Properties of Lipids Do not readily dissolve in water Fats are solid at room temperature Oils are liquid at room temperature.

CABG surgery