Issue 1, 2012

Dietary fatty acids linking postprandial metabolic response and chronic diseases

Abstract

Chronic diseases are by far one of the main causes of mortality in the world. One of the current global recommendations to counteract disability and premature death resulting from chronic diseases is to decrease the consumption of energy-dense high-fat diets, particularly those rich in saturated fatty acids (SFA). The most effective replacement for SFA in terms of risk factor outcomes for chronic disease are polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA). The biochemical basis for healthy benefits of such a dietary pattern has been widely evaluated under fasting conditions. However, the increasing amount of data available from multiple studies suggest that the postprandial state, i.e., “the period that comprises and follows a meal”, plays an important, yet underappreciated, role in the genesis of numerous pathological conditions. In this review, the potential of MUFA, PUFA, and SFA to postprandially affect selected metabolic abnormalities related to chronic diseases is discussed.

Graphical abstract: Dietary fatty acids linking postprandial metabolic response and chronic diseases

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
28 May 2011
Accepted
03 Oct 2011
First published
21 Oct 2011

Food Funct., 2012,3, 22-27

Dietary fatty acids linking postprandial metabolic response and chronic diseases

A. Ortega, L. M. Varela, B. Bermudez, S. Lopez, R. Abia and F. J. G. Muriana, Food Funct., 2012, 3, 22 DOI: 10.1039/C1FO10085H

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