Abstract

SummarySixteen mucilaginous polysac-charides fed to chickens for 28 days at various levels between 1.0% and 0.5% of a casein-sucrose basal diet supplemented with 3% cholesterol exhibited hypocholesterolemic activity. Relative decreasing order of activity of 14 of these agents tested at the 3% dietary level is: carrageenin, salep root, guar gum, karaya gum, locust bean gum, ghatti gum, psyllium seed, tragacanth gum, shiraz gum, dextran CR, pectin N. F., agar, alginic acid and dialdehyde gum XO-200. The two other active agents, fucoidin and polysaccharide Y-1401, were tested only at 2%) of the diet. Carrageenin demonstrated activity at the 1%. dietary level and guar gum as low as 0.5%. Carrageenin was active in a soybean protein-glucose synthetic diet and in a commercial-type diet supplemented with 3% cholesterol. Significant reductions in plasma cholesterol levels were obtained with 3% and 2% guar gum in the casein-sucrose basal diet unsupplemented with cholesterol, indicating that guar gum can lower the e...

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