Abstract
BackgroundPrevious animal studies suggested that Chlorella, a unicellular green alga, has a preventive role in maintaining serum cholesterol levels against excess dietary cholesterol intake. This study aimed to conduct a pioneering investigation to clarify this issue in healthy subjects by adopting a dietary cholesterol challenge, which has not been used previously in similar studies of Chlorella in hypercholesterolemia.MethodsIn this double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study, 34 participants ingested 510 mg of dietary cholesterol from three eggs concomitantly with a usual dose of Chlorella (5 g/d) or a matched placebo for 4 weeks.ResultsThe dietary cholesterol challenge induced consistently higher concentrations of serum total cholesterol (TC, P < 0.001), LDL-C (P = 0.004), and HDL-C (P = 0.010) compared with baseline values, suggesting that the challenge was reliable. Thus, we observed a preventive action of Chlorella in maintaining serum TC versus placebo levels (3.5 % versus 9.8 %, respectively; P = 0.037) and LDL-C versus placebo levels (1.7 % versus 14.3 %, respectively; P = 0.012) against excessive dietary cholesterol intake and in augmenting HDL-C versus placebo levels (8.3 % versus 3.8 %, respectively). Furthermore, serum α-carotene showed the best separation between the placebo and Chlorella groups (R2X and R2Y > 0.5; Q2 > 0.4).ConclusionThe results suggest that a fully replicated dietary cholesterol challenge may be useful in assessing the effectiveness of dietary supplements in maintaining the serum lipid profiles of adults whose habitual diets are high in cholesterol.Trial registrationWHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (KCT0000258)
Highlights
Previous animal studies suggested that Chlorella, a unicellular green alga, has a preventive role in maintaining serum cholesterol levels against excess dietary cholesterol intake
We examined whether carotenoids derived from the eggs may have hampered the prediction of the responses of serum lipids to Chlorella carotenoids by using partial least squares (PLS) regression
No significant between-group differences were observed for any nutrient, β-carotene intake was significantly increased in the Chlorella group compared to the placebo group (P = 0.010 for interaction)
Summary
Previous animal studies suggested that Chlorella, a unicellular green alga, has a preventive role in maintaining serum cholesterol levels against excess dietary cholesterol intake. This study aimed to conduct a pioneering investigation to clarify this issue in healthy subjects by adopting a dietary cholesterol challenge, which has not been used previously in similar studies of Chlorella in hypercholesterolemia. A high serum cholesterol level is thought to be a major risk factor for CVD [1]. Animal experiments have shown that Chlorella inhibited the intestinal absorption of excess cholesterol from the diet and enhanced fecal steroid excretion, thereby preventing hypercholesterolemia [6]. Several previous human clinical trials, including our own, have attempted only to determine only whether Chlorella supplementation is useful to reduce the high cholesterol levels of hypercholesterolemic subjects [7]
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