Asia Pacific J Clin
Nutr (1997) 6(1): 12-16

Modulation
of human lipids and lipoproteins by dietary palm oil and palm olein:
a review
Kalyana Sundram
Palm Oil Research Institute of Malaysia, Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia
Several human clinical trials have now evaluated
palm oils effects on blood lipids and lipoproteins. These
studies suggest that palm oil and palm olein diets do not raise
plasma TC and LDL-cholesterol levels to the extent expected from
its fatty acid composition. With maximum substitution of palm oil
in a Western type diet some coronary heart disease risk factors
were beneficially modulated: HDL2-cholesterol was significantly
increased while the apolipoprotein B/A1 ratio was beneficially lowered
by palm oil. Comparison of palm olein with a variety of monounsaturated
edible oils including rapeseed, canola, and olive oils has shown
that plasma and LDL-cholesterol were not elevated by palm olein.
To focus these findings, specific fatty acid effects have been evaluated.
Myristic acid may be the most potent cholesterol raising saturated
fatty acid. Palmitic acid effects were largely comparable to the
monounsaturated oleic acid in normolipidaemic subjects while trans
fatty acids detrimentally increased plasma cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol,
lipoprotein Lp(a) and lowered the beneficial HDL-cholesterol. Apart
from these fatty acids there is evidence that the tocotrienols in
palm oil products may have a hypocholesterolaemic effect. This is
mediated by the ability of the tocotrienols to suppress HMG-CoA
reductase. These new findings on palm oil merit a scientific reexamination
of the classical saturated fat-lipid hypothesis and its role in
lipoprotein regulation.
Key words: human lipids, lipoproteins,
fatty acids, palm oil, coronary heart disease
Introduction
Dietary fats (and fatty acids) are known to modulate
plasma lipids and lipoproteins. This concept has been extensively
researched upon since the early 1950s and evidence has steadily accumulated
hypothesising a positive correlation between saturated fat intake
and increased levels of plasma total cholesterol (TC) in humans. The
classical Keys and Hegsted equations1,2 indicated that
the three saturated fatty acids lauric, myristic and palmitic were
equally cholesterol raising. Hegsted3 originally showed
that myristic acid was more cholesterolaemic than palmitic acid in
humans. Nevertheless, this conclusion was subsequently revised after
a series of experiments with modified triglycerides. Thereafter, both
investigators developed their own regression equations that predicted
plasma cholesterol response on the basis of energy contributed by
the sum of saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids in ones
diet. These equations assumed that the monounsaturates were neutral
but that dietary cholesterol affected plasma cholesterol besides the
fatty acids.
Resulting from these and other findings, there has
been a tremendous effort to educate the consumer to choose fats containing
fatty acids that could help maintain normal cholesterol levels. Such
recommendations are embodied in almost every major national health
report focused at reducing the incidence and mortality from coronary
heart disease (CHD). Awareness of these recommendations by the consumers
has been shown by a switch from animal saturated fats to polyunsaturated
oils. Such changes are however related to the functionality of the
oils and fats concerned. The replacement of butter with margarine
and the trend towards the increased consumption of polyunsaturated
margarines and other low saturates containing fat-rich products was
seen as a positive stride in reducing CHD incidence. New data has
now shown that hydrogenation of liquid polyunsaturated and mono-unsaturated
oils used in such product formulations results in trans fatty
acids that increase the lipid associated risk factors. Since palm
oil contains 44% of its composition as saturated palmitic acid, it
is generally assumed that TC elevation following its long term consumption
would be imminent. Indeed several human studies4-8 have
reported that palmitic acid enriched diets derived from palm oil resulted
in higher TC and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) than
did diets enriched either in oleic or linoleic acids. However, newer
studies to be examined below have since produced results that are
contradictory to the above. At least one population (epidemiology)
study has reported that normal TC values are possible in a dietary
environment in which palm oil was the predominant fat source9.
The issue is further confounded by reported effects of triglyceride
species10 and the minor components11 on cholesterol
modulation.
Historical
studies evaluating palm oil effects
One of earliest clinical trials evaluating palm oil
was pioneered by Arhens et al12 who fed two of their
subjects a liquid formula diet containing 40% energy as palm oil under
metabolic conditions. The TC levels of both these subjects fed palm
oil was significantly higher than during a corn oil period. Nevertheless,
the TC values after the palm oil period was lower than the baseline
values. Grande et al13 showed that a palm oil enriched
diet resulted in higher TC than a diet predominated by stearic acid
derived from cocoa butter. This study was also noteworthy in that
it confirmed Keys earlier observation that stearic acid lacked
a cholesterol raising effect.
Anderson et al4 fed 12 volunteers
diets containing 35% saturated fat contributed by two parts of palm
oil and one part coconut oil and compared its cholesterolaemic effects
with a polyunsaturated safflower oil diet. The safflower oil diet
resulted in lower serum TC than the saturated fat diet. However, the
saturated fat diets actually resulted in approximately 10% lower serum
TC levels than the subjects habitual diets. In 1984, Baudet
et al5 undertook a dietary trial using Benedictine
nuns to evaluate the effect of 30% fat calories contributed predominantly
(two thirds) by palm oil, sunflower seed oil, peanut oil or milk fat
on serum lipid and lipoprotein levels. The sunflower seed oil diet
reduced serum TC and LDL-C significantly compared with all other diets.
Serum TC and LDL-C were essentially similar after the palm oil and
peanut oil diets whereas milk fat resulted in significantly higher
TC and LDL-C levels than all the other test diets.
Mattson and Grundy6 fed 20 male volunteers
a liquid formula diet containing 40% calories contributed either by
palm oil, high oleic safflower oil or high linoleic safflower oil.
After four weeks, the high oleic and high linoleic safflower oil diets
produced significantly lower TC and LDL-C than the palm oil diet.
HDL-C on the palm oil and high oleic safflower oil diets were similar
but HDL-C on the high linoleic safflower oil diet was significantly
lower.
In a follow-up study, Grundy and Vega7
fed 11 patients liquid formula diets containing 40% fat calories (high
fat) and compared their effects with a 20% fat calories (low fat)
diet. The high fat diets were formulated with either coconut oil,
palm oil or high oleate safflower oil. The 11 patients were then subdivided
into two groups in which seven were fed the coconut oil diet while
the remaining four the palm oil diet. The patients were al so rotated
through the high-oleate safflower oil and low-fat diets. TC and LDL-C
were significantly lower on the high oleate safflower oil diet compared
with all other test diets. The four patients on the palm oil diet
had TC, LDL-C and HDL-C values than were lower than the coconut oil
diets and the habitual diets of these patients.
Bonanome and Grundy8 evaluated the impact
of palm oil, high oleic safflower oil and an interesterified fat blend
(43% 18:0 and 40% 18:1) using liquid formula diets in 11 elderly patients.
The diets contributed 40% fat calories and were consumed by the subjects
for three weeks in a random order. Mean TC and LDL-C after the palm
oil diet was significantly higher than the values of either the high
oleic safflower oil or the high stearate interesterified fat. Cholesterol
levels after the palm oil period were 11% lower than the entry (habitual)
levels but this was discounted by the authors who suggested that lowering
of the cholesterol levels of subjects on admission to a metabolic
ward was a commonly observed phenomenon. The study was also important
in that it concluded that stearic acid had a neutral impact on cholesterol
and lipoprotein levels in humans.
Laine et al14 compared the effect
of palm oil, corn oil, soybean oil and lightly hydrogenated soybean
oil added to cholesterol rich diets containing 35% fat energy in 24
normocholesterolaemic students. Cholesterol levels after the corn
oil, soybean oil and lightly hydrogenated soybean oil were lower by
14, 13 and 9% respectively compared with the palm oil diet. The analysis
of this data was however complicated by the higher levels of dietary
cholesterol consumed during the palm oil period.
These studies are often cited as examples of the cholesterol
raising properties of palm oil containing 50% of its fatty acid composition
as saturates. On closer exam-ination of these studies, several fallacies
have been pointed out. For example, these studies were characterised
by:
- the use of liquid formula diets in which fats contributed
about 40% energy,
- the use of relatively older subjects with moderate
to severe hypercholesterolemia,
- the feeding of atypical diets in which the target
fatty acid often represented an excessive intake of the total fatty
acids.
These characteristics led to plasma lipid changes
that seemingly established the cholesterol raising effects of palm
oil. However, most latter date studies in which solid-food diets were
used with more realistic fatty acid exchanges and mildly hypercholesterolaemic
to normocholesterolaemic younger subjects, the cholesterol raising
attribute of palm oil was either muted or disappeared. In contrast
to the older studies, recent trials have used palm olein, the liquid
fraction of palm oil rather than palm oil itself. Whether the switch
to palm olein having a higher unsaturated fatty acid composition (reduced
palmitic, increased oleic and linoleic acids) resulted in the muted
cholesterol response in the subjects is not clearly defined. Some
of these recent studies are discussed below.
Palm olein
versus polyunsaturated oils
Marzuki et al15 using young volunteers
evaluated the effect of consuming foods containing either palm olein
or soybean oil. In normal healthy volunteers the level of serum TC
and LDL-C was not affected by the palm olein or soybean oil diets.
In hypocholesterolaemic (HYPO or HYPER?) subjects however the soybean
oil diet induced higher serum TC and LDL-C levels than the palm olein
diet. In a similar study16 when volunteers were switched
from a coconut oil diet to a palm olein or a corn oil diet, serum
TC dropped by 36 mg/dL and 51 mg/dL respectively. Hence a reduction
in serum TC was observed on administering a palm olein or corn oil
diet relative to a coconut oil diet. However the decrease in TC due
to corn oil was significantly better than that on palm olein. Ghafoorunissa
et al17 substituted palm olein for groundnut oil
in the typical Indian diet contributing 27% energy as fat. This effectively
doubled the availability of the saturated fatty acids and decreased
by half the linoleic acid content of the diet. In spite of these major
shifts in the fatty acid composition due to the use of palm olein,
plasma levels of cholesterol and the lipoproteins were not altered
in this population.
Palm olein
versus the monounsaturated oils
Ng et al18 evaluated the effects
of palm olein and olive oil on serum lipids and lipoproteins in comparison
to a coconut oil diet. Each test oil was served as the sole cooking
oil and contributed two thirds of the total fat intake. The coconut
oil diet significantly raised all the serum lipid and lipoprotein
parameters, ie TC, LDL-C and HDL-C. However, the one-to-one exchange
between palm olein (rich in 16:0) and olive oil (rich in 18:1) resulted
in identical TC, LDL-C and HDL-C values. This showed that in healthy
normocholesterolaemic humans, palm olein can be exchanged for olive
oil (high oleic) without adversely affecting the serum lipids and
lipoprotein levels. Choudhury et al19 managed a
5% en exchange between palm oil (16:0-rich) and olive oil (18:l-rich)
in 21 healthy normocholesterolaemic Australian men and women consuming
a low fat (30% en) and low dietary cholesterol (<200 mg/day) diet.
Under these conditions, TC and LDL-C were almost identical between
the two oils, so that when 16:0 in palm oil was replaced with 18:1
in olive oil, the expected increase in TC and LDL-C were not evident.
A similar effect between palm olein and canola oil was also reported
by the same authors in a previous human study20.
Sundram et al21 fed 23 healthy normocholesterolaemic
male volunteers carefully designed whole food diets containing canola
oil (18:1-rich), palm olein (16:0-rich) or an American Heart Association
Step 1 diet (AHA), all contributing approximately 3 l % en fat and
<200mg dietary cholesterol/day. These diets represented the direct
exchange of 7% en 18:1+18:2 between canola oil and palm olein whereas
the main difference between palm olein and AHA was < 4% en exchanged
between 16:0 and 18:2. Serum TC, VLDLC and LDL-C were not significantly
affected by these three diets despite manipulations of the key fatty
acids. The effects between the high 18:1 canola and the high 16:0
palm olein were essentially identical. Only HDL-C after the AHA diet
attained significance compared with the other two diets.
In contrast to the above studies, Zock et al22
reported that replacing 10% en from 16:0 with 18:1 in normocholesterolaemic
subjects significantly lowered TC and LDL-C. This Dutch study did
not use natural fat sources. The 18:1-rich diet was prepared by blending
high 18: 1 sunflower oil, fully hydrogenated sunflower oil and high
18:2 sunflower oil and interesterified palm oil mixed with other edible
oils. The 16:0-rich diet was formulated by blending fractionated palm
oil, cottonseed oil, and fully hydrogenated sunflower oil. The feeding
of fat blends containing atypical triglyceride moieties may have been
partially responsible for the observed increase in TC and LDL-C. By
contrast, when Sundram et al22 maximally replaced
the habitual Dutch diet with palm oil TC and LDL-C was unaffected.
The palm oil diet however resulted in significant improvements in
the HDL2-C and the apolipoprotein A1/B ratio signalling some cardiovascular
benefits rather that the reverse to be true for palm oil.
Palm oil
(16:0-rich) versus other saturates
The human diet contains a mixture of different fats,
and therefore mixtures of different fatty acids. The net effect of
such a mixture on TC and/or the individual lipoproteins will be the
sum of many fatty acids, some acting in opposite directions to each
other. It is therefore important to decipher the key cholesterol modulating
fatty acids to determine the cholesterolaemic index of the fat or
oil consumed. Fortunately, several recent human studies have focussed
on these issues and have provided additional observations that tend
to support the Hegsted3 observation that saturated fatty
acids differ in their cholesterol regulating ability. Some of these
studies that used palm oil as a source of 16:0 in their test diets
are described below.
Sundram et al24 fed 17 normocholesterolaemic
subjects whole food diets that exchanged 5% en between 16:0 and 12:0+14:0
(LM). Compared with the LM diet, the 16:0 rich diet produced a 9%
lower TC concentration reflected primarily by a lower (11%) LDL-C
concentration. Heber et al25 evaluated diets enriched
in palm oil, coconut oil or hydrogenated soybean oil for 3-week test
periods in healthy American males. Significant increases in TC, LDL-C
and apolipoprotein B was apparent following consumption of the coconut
oil diet but not the palm oil and the hydrogenated soybean oil diet.
In the Ng studies16,18, coconut oil enriched diets were
compared to palm olein. In both populations, the coconut oil feeding
resulted in significant increases in TC and LDL-C compared with the
palm olein feeding.
These studies compared the effects of 12:0+14:0 occurring
naturally in coconut oil and palm kernel oil. They suggest that the
cholesterolaemic effect due to 16:0 (palmitic acid) is significantly
lower than that of a LM combination. Coconut oil is almost 85% saturated
and it has been suggested that the higher cholesterol values after
a coconut oil diet may be simply due to the lower availability of
linoleic acid. This suggestion has been discounted in the recent study
of Sundram et al26 wherein, despite the incorporation
of a high level of 18:2 (5.6% en) in the LM diet, it induced significantly
higher concentrations of TC and LDL-C in healthy volunteers compared
to a 16:0-rich palm olein diet (3.3% en as 18:2).
The higher TC and LDL-C induced by the LM diets are
inconsistent with the values expected based on the Keys-Hegsted equations1-3
which predict that identical TC concentrations would result from both
fatty acids. However it is arguable that the simplified combination
of the different dietary saturates effects in the Keys-Hegsted regressions
tend to overestimate the importance of 16:0 and underestimate the
impact of 12:0+14:0. The question that remains is of the two fatty
acids namely 12:0 and 14:0 which is more cholesterolaemic? The separation
of 12:0 and 14:0 from natural fat sources is difficult since they
tend to co-occur. However, by manipulating coconut oil (higher 12:0)
and butter fat (higher 14:0) intake separation of the 12:0 versus
14:0 cholesterolaemic effects has been achieved27. The
data suggests that 14:0 is the most potent cholesterol raising saturate
and this potency has been calculated to be four times that of 16:0.
The lower cholesterol raising ability of 12:0 in relation to 16:0
is however, less clearly defined.
Using 15 normocholesterolaemic women fed solid-food
diets, Schwaab et al28 failed to find any difference
on plasma lipid levels following a 4% en exchange between 12:0 and
16:0. Temme et al29 reported the effects of feeding
diets enriched in lauric and palmitic acids on plasma lipids. The
subjects consumed solid food diets that exchanged 8% en between lauric
and palmitic acids. The lauric acid diet induced higher TC and LDL-C
than the palmitic acid diet but this could not be explained by the
somewhat higher myristic acid content in the diet. Accordingly, the
plasma lipid changes would appear to suggest that lauric acid per
se was more cholesterol raising than the palmitic acid. In the Denke
and Grundy study30, the 12:0-rich diet (contributing 17.6%
en) raised TC by 9 mg/dL compared with a diet with 17.4% en 16:0.
The increase occurred exclusively in LDL-C. These data therefore suggest
that the cholesterolaemic effects of 16:0 derived from palm oil/palm
olein are lower than that of 12:0 and 14:0 derived from natural fats
including coconut oil, palm kernel oil and butter fat.
Palm oil
versus hydrogenated fats (trans fatty acids)
Controversy continues over the significance of trans
fatty acids in human nutrition, particularly concerning their negative
impact on the plasma lipoprotein profile and its untoward implications
for atherogenesis. Trans fatty acids can deleteriously affect
lipoproteins by increasing TC, LDL-C, lipoprotein Lp(a) and decreasing
HDL-C relative to their cis isomers. This has raised the need to replace
hydrogenated fats with natural solid fats in a large number of food
formulations. The nutritional efficacy of the solid fats replacing
hydrogenated fats should be such that they do not adversely affect
plasma lipids and other CHD risk factors. In this context palm oil
is perceived as a suitable alternative.
Nestel et al31 compared a trans
elaidic rich fat with a 16:0-rich blend (16:0 contributed mainly by
palm oil). Both test blends resulted in higher TC and LDL-C than an
oleic-rich control diet. There was essentially no difference in TC
and LDL-C between the elaidic-rich and palm oil-rich test diets. HDL-C
was however significantly raised on the 16:0-rich diet and the resulting
LDL/HDL-C ratio was more favourable than the trans diet. This
led the authors to conclude that there is little benefit from avoiding
the use of palm oil by substituting trans fatty acids in food
formulations. Sundram et al26 undertook a direct
comparison between trans elaidic fat designed to replace the
saturates (16:0, 12:0+14:0) in foods and food processing. Feeding
of elaidic acid at 5.5% en significantly elevated TC and LDL-C relative
to the 16:0-rich (palm olein) and 18: l-rich fats and uniquely depressed
HDL-C and increased lipoprotein Lp(a) relative to all the fats tested
(including 12:0+14:0). Identical effects on lipoproteins were elicited
by the 16:0 and cis 18:1-rich diets. The authors concluded that the
impact of trans elaidic acid on the lipoprotein profile of
humans appears to be worse than the saturates occurring in natural
oils and fats.
Conclusion
These studies suggest that the cholesterolaemic properties
of palm oil and palm olein are dependent upon several set points.
Palm oil and palm olein have been shown to be hypocholesterolaemic
in comparison with diets contributing variable amounts of lauric and
myristic fatty acids. This augers well for the hypothesis that the
cholesterolaemic effects of the saturated fatty acids are not equal.
Indeed the neutrality of stearic acid has long been advocated. In
comparison to diets enriched by canola, rapeseed and olive oils, palm
olein appears to be comparable in its ability to modulate the lipids
and lipoproteins. The studies that lend credence to this fact were
conducted with normal healthy volunteers consuming moderate fat energy
loads (30% en) and moderate dietary cholesterol (<300 mg/day).
When hypercholesterolaemic subjects and high fat liquid formula diets
were used palm oil appeared to raise TC and LDL-C. There is a lack
of data for palm oils effects on hypercholesterolaemics and
this issue will need to be addressed soon. Palm oil and palm olein
could also continue as important ingredients in food applications
requiring solid fats without hydrogenation. It certainly seems nutritionally
superior to hydrogenated fats by not increasing TC and LDL-C while
sometimes even aiding in the increase of the beneficial HDL-cholesterol.
Apart from its fatty acids, the minor components present in palm oil,
especially the tocotrienols have been reported to reduce TC and LDL-C32
through their ability to suppress HMG-CoA reductase activity. These
findings merit a reevaluation of the nutritional properties of palm
oil and palm olein especially since it is poised to continue its importance
as a major edible oil for human consumption worldwide.
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Modulation of human
lipids and lipoproteins by dietary palm oil and palm olein: a review
Kalyana Sundram
Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition (1997) Volume 6, Number
1: 12-16


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Nutrition]. All rights reserved.
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