The effects of two different plant sterols on intestinal cholesterol absorption were compared in normal volunteers by an intestinal perfusion study during a control period followed by high dose infusion of sitosterol or sitostanol (3.6 mumol/min), to which subjects were allocated in a randomized manner. Cholesterol absorption during the control period was similar in the two groups, averaging 0.88 +/- 0.48 mumol/min (32 +/- 11%) for group I (sitosterol) and 0.68 +/- 0.33 mumol/min (29 +/- 9%) for group II (sitostanol). The infusion of a high dose of sitosterol resulted in a significant reduction of cholesterol absorption to 0.47 mumol/min (16%). Following the same dose of sitostanol, cholesterol absorption diminished significantly to 0.15 +/- 0.11 mumol/min (5.1 +/- 2.9%). Overall cholesterol absorption declined during sitosterol infusion by almost 50%, whereas sitostanol infusion caused a reduction of cholesterol absorption by almost 85%. These findings of a more effective inhibition of cholesterol absorption by sitostanol might confirm the observation recorded by others that an increase in hydrophobicity of a plant sterol results in a higher affinity but lower capacity to mixed micells. This may cause an effective displacement of cholesterol from micellar binding and therefore diminished cholesterol absorption.
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Wardhani, G. K., Mudigdo, A., & Qadrijati, I. (2017). Path analysis on the Determinants of Pap Smear Utilization for Cervical Cancer Early Detection in Women of Reproductive Age. Journal of Health Promotion and Behavior, 02(04), 359–370. https://doi.org/10.26911/thejhpb.2017.02.04.08