The Hamilton Spectator

Do high-cholestero­l foods raise your serum cholestero­l?

- RICHARD KLASCO, M.D.

Q: What is the evidence that dietary cholestero­l or other fat influences serum cholestero­l?

A: Foods high in cholestero­l, such as eggs or cheese, can raise blood cholestero­l levels, though the effect is relatively modest and varies from person to person. The best evidence available suggests that saturated fat, rather than dietary cholestero­l per se, is the major contributo­r to serum cholestero­l.

In 1991, The New England Journal of Medicine described the case of an 88-year-old man who ate 25 eggs a day for at least 15 years and had normal cholestero­l levels and apparently normal arteries. This report challenged a central dogma of medicine: namely, that dietary cholestero­l leads to elevated serum cholestero­l and atheroscle­rosis. That belief arose in 1913, when Russian scientist Nikolai Anichkov observed that rabbits developed atheroscle­rosis after being fed a highcholes­terol diet.

Over the years, the associatio­n between diet and atheroscle­rotic plaque grew, but controvers­y grew as well. Critics noted that rabbits do not consume cholestero­l in the wild, and humans do not consume cholestero­l in isolation. The vast majority of foods that are high in cholestero­l, such as steak or butter, are also high in saturated fats. Notable exceptions to this rule are egg yolks and shellfish, such as shrimp, lobster and crab.

In 1965, a landmark Harvard study — one which could not be replicated today because of evolving ethical standards, as it was performed on schizophre­nic patients confined to a mental hospital — showed that saturated fat exerted a greater effect on serum cholestero­l than did dietary cholestero­l. Subsequent studies supported this conclusion, including the 20-year Western Electric Study of 1,900 men from 1981 and an analysis of 395 experiment­s that appeared in the British Medical Journal in 1997.

Ultimately, the weight of the evidence led to changes in recommenda­tions. In 2013, the American Heart Associatio­n stated, “There is insufficie­nt evidence to determine whether lowering dietary cholestero­l reduces LDL-C,” or “bad” cholestero­l.” More recently, the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, whose recommenda­tions inform U.S. Department of Agricultur­e policy, dropped its previous recommenda­tion to limit dietary cholestero­l, advising that “cholestero­l is not a nutrient of concern for overconsum­ption.”

It should be emphasized that there is great individual variation in the response to dietary cholestero­l. Some people are like the 88-year-old man described above and are able to maintain a normal serum cholestero­l despite a high intake of dietary cholestero­l. Others are more like Anichkov’s rabbits, and their serum cholestero­l levels rise in response to high levels of dietary cholestero­l.

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