Coronary heart disease - dietary lipids or refined carbohydrates?
Abstract
The epidemiological evidence associating dietary lipids,
refined carbohydrates and coronary heart disease (CHD) is
evaluated. Population studies often show a high correlation
between dietary lipid and heart disease mortality. It is
argued that most of this association is secondary to the high
correlation that refined carbohydrates have with dietary
lipids, on the one hand, and with CHD on the other. This becomes
apparent only when examples are found of a weak or
negative correlation between dietary lipids and refined
carbohydrates. Evidence from diet and drug intervention
studies support the hypothesis that dietary lipid is only
of secondary importance in CHD. It is concluded that refined
carbohydrates are of primary importance.