Abstract

The current study evaluates the hypothesis, derived from previous investigations, that alterations in dietary fat and cholesterol influence the social behavior of monkeys. Subjects were 62 adult male, cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) assigned originally to an investigation of atherosclerosis regression. This study thus involves a secondary analysis of data derived from an investigation conducted for another purpose. Animals were housed for 14 months' in social groups of five individuals each and initially fed a diet very high in saturated fat and cholesterol to induce coronary artery atherosclerosis. Monkeys were then exposed for 28 months to one of three conditions; (1) a moderately high-fat, high-cholesterol diet and an unstable social environment (in which monkeys were switched among groups monthly); (2) a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet and an unstable social environment; and (3) a low-fat, low-cholesterol diet and a stable social environment. A comparison of animals living in unstable groups revealed that those consuming the low-fat diet exhibited more overt aggression (P < 0.001) and overt submission (P < 0.01) than did monkeys eating the high-fat diet. A second comparison involved only those animals living in stable social units. These monkeys, while consuming the low-fat diet, engaged in more aggression and submission (Ps < 0.05), spent less time in passive body contact or within touching distance (Ps < 0.001), and spent more time alone (P < 0.001) than they had initially while consuming a very high-fat diet. The current investigation is the first on this topic to include measures of social behavior in animals both before and after a reduction in dietary fat. The findings that such a reduction is associated with increased agonism and decreased affiliation may help explain the epidemiologic association in human beings between low or reduced plasma cholesterol concentrations and a high incidence of violence-related mortality. More generally, the data are consistent with the hypothesis that there is a negative feedback adaptation providing for appropriate changes in behavior in response to periodic dietary privation. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call