Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden found that switching to a diet rich in plant-based unsaturated fats significantly reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

From Chalmers University of Technology 17/07/24

CREDIT Chalmers University of Technology | Emma Fry
CREDIT Chalmers University of Technology | Emma Fry

Switching from a diet high in saturated animal fats to one rich in plant-based unsaturated fats affects the fat composition in the blood.

This in turn influences long-term disease risk.

A recent study published in Nature Medicine, conducted by a team of researchers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, the German Institute of Human Nutrition, Germany, and several other universities, shows that it is possible to accurately measure diet-related fat changes in the blood and directly link them to the risk of developing cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.

“Our study confirms with even more certainty the health benefits of a diet high in unsaturated plant fats such as the Mediterranean diet and could help provide targeted dietary advice to those who would benefit most from changing their eating habits,” says Clemens Wittenbecher, research leader at Chalmers University of Technology and the study’s senior author.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) highlights the importance of healthy diets in preventing chronic diseases, recommending the replacement of saturated fats with plant-based unsaturated fats to reduce cardiometabolic risk.

However, the certainty of these guidelines is moderate due to limitations in existing studies.

This new study addresses these limitations by closely analysing fats in the blood, also known as lipids, with a method called lipidomics.

These very detailed lipid measurements enabled the researchers to link diet and disease in an innovative combination of different study types.

This novel approach combines dietary intervention studies, that use highly controlled diets, with previously carried out cohort studies with long-term health tracking.

Part of this research was conducted in a dietary intervention study at the University of Reading, U.K., which involved 113 participants.

For 16 weeks, one group consumed a diet high in saturated animal fats, while the other group followed a diet rich in unsaturated plant-based fats.

Blood samples were analysed using lipidomics to identify specific lipid molecules reflecting the different diets each participant consumed.

Clemens Wittenbecher, Assistant Professor, Department of Life Sciences, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. CREDIT Chalmers University of Technology | Martina Butorac
Clemens Wittenbecher, Assistant Professor, Department of Life Sciences, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden. CREDIT Chalmers University of Technology | Martina Butorac

“We summarised the effects on blood lipids with a multi-lipid score (MLS).”

“A high MLS indicates a healthy blood fat profile, and a high intake of unsaturated plant fat and low intake of saturated animal fat can help achieving such positive MLS levels,” says Fabian Eichelmann from the German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke and first author of the study.

These MLS results from the dietary intervention study were then statistically related to the occurrence of cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes in large observational studies that had previously been carried out.

These large cohort studies followed initially healthy participants for several years.

This analysis of data from both sets of studies showed that participants with a higher MLS, which indicates a beneficial dietary fat composition, had a substantially reduced risk of developing cardiometabolic diseases.

Additionally, the study examined whether individuals with low MLS levels, indicating high saturated fat content of the diet, specifically benefited from a healthier diet.

The Mediterranean diet focuses on providing more unsaturated plant fats and was used in one of the large intervention trials, known as the PREDIMED trial.

Using this study, the researchers found that diabetes prevention was indeed most pronounced in individuals with low MLS levels at the start of the study.

“Diet is so complex that it is often difficult to draw conclusive evidence from a single study.”

“Our approach of using lipidomics to combine intervention studies with highly controlled diets and prospective cohort studies with long-term health tracking can overcome current limitations in nutrition research,” explains Clemens Wittenbecher.

More info

Paper

You may also be curious about:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Recieve the latest innovation, emerging tech, research, science and engineering news from Superinnovators.