Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5669
Title: Whole-Milk Dairy Foods: Biological Mechanisms Underlying Beneficial Effects on Risk Markers for Cardiometabolic Health
Authors: Torres-Gonzalez, Moises
H. Rice Bradley, Beth
Keywords: dairy
milk
cheese
yogurt
food matrix
cardiovascular disease
metabolic health
milk fat globular membrane
milk polar lipids
fermented dairy
Issue Date: 7-Sep-2023
Publisher: Advances in Nutrition
Series/Report no.: Reviews;1523-1537
Abstract: Lifestyle modifications that include adherence to healthy dietary patterns that are low in saturated fat have been associated with reduced risk for cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death globally. Whole-milk dairy foods, including milk, cheese, and yogurt, are leading sources of saturated fat in the diet. Dietary guidelines around the world recommend the consumption of low-fat and fat-free dairy foods to obtain overall healthy dietary patterns that help meet nutrient recommendations while keeping within recommended calorie and saturated fat limitations. A body of observational and clinical evidence indicates, however, that whole-milk dairy food consumption, despite saturated fat content, does not increase the risk for cardiovascular disease. This review describes the proposed biological mechanisms underlying inverse associations between whole-milk dairy food consumption and risk markers for cardiometabolic health, such as altered lipid digestion, absorption, and metabolism; influence on the gut microflora; and regulation of oxidative stress and inflammatory responses. The dairy food matrix, a term used to describe how the macronutrients and micronutrients and other bioactive components of dairy foods are differentially packaged and compartmentalized among fluid milk, cheese, and yogurt, may dictate how each affects cardiovascular risk. Current evidence indicates consideration of dairy foods as complex food matrices, rather than delivery systems for isolated nutrients, such as saturated fatty acids, is warranted.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5669
Appears in Collections:VOL 14 NO 6 (2023)

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