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Variability in individual serum cholesterol response to change in diet.
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1983
Year
NutritionNutritional EpidemiologyPublic Health NutritionMean TcMetabolic SyndromeBiostatisticsPublic HealthDiet ScoreAtherosclerosisDyslipidemiaHealth SciencesIntrinsic HyporesponsivenessLipid NutritionClinical NutritionCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyNutritional SciencesMetabolismNutrition Assessment
Few systematic data are available on the range of individual blood lipid responsiveness to specific diet changes. Multiple, carefully standardized total serum cholesterol (TC) measurements were made in 58 men under a variety of controlled dietary conditions. Responsiveness was defined for each individual as the change in mean TC per unit change in Diet Score based on the Keys-Minnesota equation. Only 3% were potentially nonresponders, and even these probably evidenced some response. Of the group, 64% responded within 30% of prediction. We classed 9% as hyporesponders, while in another 9% responsiveness exceeded 1.5 times expectation. We conclude that in metabolically normal individuals the variation in short-term response to dietary change is normally distributed but that nonresponse to diet change is rare. Because metabolic, intrinsic hyporesponsiveness of TC to change in diet composition is uncommon, assessment of the real effectiveness of a dietary regimen in an individual is best based on observed d...