Plasma, tissue and fecal cholesterol of young pigs fed restricted or liberal amounts of beef, soy or conventional diets

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Abstract

Cholesterol disposition (tissue disposition + fecal excretion) was determined in young pigs fed restricted (trial 1) or liberal (trial 2) amounts of beef-based, soy-based or conventional swine diets. Cholesterol content of diet is greater than average United States consumption per kilogram body weight but is very similar on a per-kilocalorie intake basis. Both beef and soy diets contained more cholesterol (0.09% by weight vs. 0%) and fat (40-50% of calories vs. 8-9%) than did conventional diets. Dried egg yolk was the source of cholesterol in the soy diets. Beef- and soy-fed pigs had greater plasma, HDL and LDL cholesterol concentrations than did conventionally fed pigs; beef-fed pigs had greater plasma, HDL and LDL cholesterol concentrations than did soy-fed pigs in trial 2 only. Final HDL-to-LDL cholesterol ratios did not differ. Neutral steroid and bile acid excretion was twofold greater in soy-fed than in conventionally or beef-fed pigs in trial 2 only. Differences in cholesterol concentrations were found in liver (soy, beef > conventional) and heart (soy > beef, conventional) in trial 1 and in liver (soy, beef > conventional), adipose tissue (soy > conventional > beef) and aorta and other viscera (conventional > soy, beef) in trial 2. In both trials, soy-fed pigs had greatest whole-body cholesterol concentrations. Thus, in both trials, disposition of cholesterol was similar in conventionally fed and beef-fed pigs, despite greater cholesterol intake in the latter, but was greater in soy-fed pigs.

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Diersen-Schade, D. A., Richard, M. J., Beitz, D. C., & Jacobson, N. L. (1986). Plasma, tissue and fecal cholesterol of young pigs fed restricted or liberal amounts of beef, soy or conventional diets. Journal of Nutrition, 116(11), 2086–2095. https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/116.11.2086

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