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©The Author(s) 2024.
World J Clin Pediatr. Jun 9, 2024; 13(2): 91478
Published online Jun 9, 2024. doi: 10.5409/wjcp.v13.i2.91478
Published online Jun 9, 2024. doi: 10.5409/wjcp.v13.i2.91478
MetS inductors and interventions | Population (age, n) | Measured parameters | Outcomes | Type of study | Ref. |
Saturated fatty acids | 6-16 (n = 108); OB children | lipid profiles | High saturated fat intake was associated with higher BMI, NAFLD positivity. TG, total cholesterol, LDL-C and HOMA-IR were significantly higher in SFA consumption group | Cross-sectional study | Maffeis et al[81] |
Fructose restriction | 8-18 (n = 20) Children with obesity and MetS | Lactate in serum (related with liver fat fraction and visceral adipose tissue) | Fructose restriction produced a 50% decrease in lactate, which was related with decreased de novo lipogenesis and insulin sensitivity | Clinical trial | Erkin-Cakmak et al[85] |
Sugar sweetened beverages (Fructose) | 6-12 (n = 1,087); OB children | Adiposity (BMI, WC), cardiovascular risk markers (glucose, insulin, HOMA-IR, TG, LDL-C, HDL) | TG, insulin, TC and LDL concentrations and HOMA-IR were significantly higher in OB children | Association study | Huerta-Ávila et al[86] |
Moderate fruit consumption | 5-19 (n = 14, 755) | Lipid Profile (TC, TG), fasting serum insulin (HOMA-IR) | Moderate fruit consumption (1.5 serving per day 6-7 d a week) was associated with lower odds of lipid disorders, improving the childhood lipid profiles | Cluster-controlled trial | Liu et al[87] |
Fructose restriction | 3-18 (Latino children n = 2; African-American children n = 16) | Anthropometric parameters (BW, WC, BMI), BP, biochemical measurements (serum lactate, TG, cholesterol and others), glucose and HOMA-IR | Fructose restriction (reduction from 28% to 10%) in children showed reductions in diastolic BP, serum lactate, TG, LDL-C. Glucose tolerance and hyperinsulinemia | Clinical trial | Lustig et al[90] |
Fructose | 12-16 (n = 1454) | HOMA-IR, uric acid, anthropometric parameters (BW, WC, BMI, body fat percentage) | High consumption of sugar sweetened beverages (> 350 mL/d) were more likely to have elevated fasting serum insulin and HOMA-IR, WC and serum uric acid compared to those not having fructose consumption | Cross-sectional study | Lin et al[96] |
UPC foods (high fructose-high fat) | 4-8 (n = 307) | Anthropometric parameters (BW, WC, BMI, WHR) and glucose profile | An increase in WC was observed in children with a higher UPC consumption. Not a direct association with altered glucose metabolism was observed | Longitudinal study | Costa et al[97] |
UPC foods (high fructose-high fat) | 3-4 (n = 346); 7-8 (n = 307) | Lipid profile (TC, TG, HDL, LDL-C) | The higher consumption of UPC, the higher increase in total cholesterol and LDL-C and altered lipoprotein profiles in children | Longitudinal study | Rauber et al[99] |
UPC foods (high fructose-high fat) | 12-19 (n = 210) Children from Brazilian family program | Urinary fructose excretion Anthropometric parameters and biochemical parameters | Significant association between MetS and the consumption of UPC foods | Cross- sectional study | Tavares et al[100] |
Fructose | 7-12 (n = 27); 13-15 (n = 25); 16-16 (n = 32); OB children | Anthropometric parameters (BW, Hgt, WC, BMI and WHR), serum lipid profiles | Higher fructose intake from beverages correlate positively with the percentage of body fat, WC, WHR, TC, TG and increased atherogenic indices | Observational study | Czerwonogrodzka-Senczyna et al[101] |
Fructose | 9-16 (n = 246) | Urinary fructose excretion | Metabolic dysfunctions and urinary excretion only at very high fructose intake levels (> 25% of total energy intake) or hypercaloric diets | Cohort study (DONALD) | Perrar et al[102] |
Trans fatty acids | 6-13 (n = 54); OB children | Anthropometric parameters, glucose and insulin. HOMA-IR, total lipids, postprandial levels of trans fatty acids | Obese children showed hyperinsulinemia and increased insulin resistance compared with controls. No differences for fasting plasma tFA or dietary tFA intake were observed | Clinical trial | Larqu et al[103] |
High dairy fat products (total and saturated fat intake) | 4-13 (n = 174) Intervention with low dairy fat products | Anthropometric parameters Pentadecanoic acid and lipid profile | Total fat and saturated fat intakes from dairy foods were lower in the intervention group (low fat dairy products consumption) but did not alter energy intakes or measures of adiposity | Randomized controlled trial | Hendrie and Golley[104] |
Model/population | Treatment | Outcomes | Ref. |
Fructose-induced NAFLD; Neonatal rats | Oleanolic acid | Attenuates the subsequent development of HFr diet-induced NAFLD | Nyakudya et al[143] |
HFr induced metabolic dysfunction; Rats (Rattus norvegicus) | Oleanolic acid (60 mg/kg); metformin (500 mg/kg) | Both treatments increased mono- and polyunsaturated FFAs, associated with increased glut-4, glut-5 and nrf-1 and decreased acc-1 and fas | Molepo et al[144] |
MetS induced by HFr diet; female mice | Tyrosol, hydroxytyrosol and salidroside | Improved glucose metabolism and lipid metabolism, including reduced levels of total cholesterol insulin, uric acid, LDL-C, and aspartate aminotransferase | Zhan et al[145] |
Obesity and related diseases in humans | Olive oil triterpenic acids | Improves glucose and insulin homeostasis, lipid metabolism, adiposity and cardiovascular dysfunction in obesity | Claro-Cala et al [146] |
HF and HFr diets induced metabolic dysfunction; Sprague dawley rat | Wheat flour, enriched with γ-oryzanol, phytosterol, and ferulic acid | Alleviates hepatic lipid accumulation and insulin resistance through their elevation in the phosphorylation of AMPK and Akt | Guo et al[147] |
HF diet induced NAFLD; C57BL/6J mice | Quercetin | Decreased insulin resistance and NAFLD activity score, by reducing the intrahepatic lipid accumulation through its ability to modulate lipid metabolism gene expression, cytochrome P450 2E1 (CYP2E1)-dependent lipoperoxidation and related lipotoxicity | Porras et al[148] |
HFr induced NAFLD; Sprague dawley rats | Ursolic acid | Ursolic acid administration against dietary fructose-induced NAFLD in newborn rats by reducing fructose-induced hepatic lipid accumulation | Mukonowenzou et al[149] |
Mouse 3T3-L1 fructose-induced NAFLD | Citrulline | Prevented hypertriglyceridemia and attenuated liver fat accumulation | Jegatheesan et al[150] |
Sprague-Dawley rats MetS; in vitro and in vivo studies | Nanoformulations of herbal extracts | Decrease the lipid profile, inflammation, oxidative damage, and insulin resistance in in vitro and in vivo models of MetS-related complications | Nouri et al[151] |
MetS humans | Pharmabiotics | Improves gut microbiota profile wich influence serum lipid levels, BP, neuroendocrine cells and immune functions via regulating the metabolism of the host | Nguyen et al[152] |
MetS; in vivo studies | Seaweed-derived bioactive components | Modulate the gut microbiota by reversing the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, increasing the relative abundance of beneficial bacteria and decreasing the abundance of harmful bacteria; these compounds increase the production of short-chain fatty acids and influence glucose and lipid metabolism | Zang et al[153] |
HFr induced adiposity | Valsartan; Amlodipine | Both treatment reduced triacylglycerol storage in adipocytes by inhibiting PU.1 | Chou et al[154] |
Hepatic steatosis induced by HFr diet; Wistar rats | β-catenin | Mediates the effect of GLP-1 receptor agonist on ameliorating hepatic steatosis | Gao et al[155] |
NAFLD and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis Humans | Acetyl-CoA Carboxylase inhibitors | Therapeutic target for MetS as a key regulatory role in fatty acid synthesis and oxidation pathways | Chen et al[156] |
- Citation: Vargas-Vargas MA, González-Montoya M, Torres-Isidro O, García-Berumen CI, Ortiz-Avila O, Calderón-Cortés E, Cortés-Rojo C. Assessing the impact of concurrent high-fructose and high-saturated fat diets on pediatric metabolic syndrome: A review. World J Clin Pediatr 2024; 13(2): 91478
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2219-2808/full/v13/i2/91478.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5409/wjcp.v13.i2.91478