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      High-fat sunflower and olive oil diets affect serum lipid levels in steatotic rat liver differently.

      Journal of nutritional science and vitaminology
      Animals, Body Weight, Diet, Dietary Fats, Unsaturated, administration & dosage, adverse effects, Fats, Unsaturated, chemistry, Fatty Liver, blood, etiology, Lipids, Lipoproteins, Liver, pathology, Male, Organ Size, Plant Oils, Rats, Rats, Wistar

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          Abstract

          This work describes the long-term effects of two different diets, one rich in olive oil and the other in sunflower oil, on serum lipid and lipoprotein levels after the establishment of fatty liver in rats 8 and 15 months old. The serum lipid and lipoprotein levels as well as the steatotic process have been evaluated by biochemical and histological methods, respectively. The results showed that fatty liver was well developed with both long-term high-fat diets, and hepatocytes were filled with many lipid droplets. This process was more evident in the portal zones, where fat hepatocytes were more numerous. Serum total cholesterol (TC) and HDL-C levels were highest in the sunflower oil fed rats, whereas the TG and LDL-C levels were highest in the olive oil group. Finally, the atherogenic indexes (HDL/TC, HDL/LDL, HDL/(TC-HDL)) were higher in the sunflower oil diet group than in the olive oil group.

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