Platelet function and composition, lipemia, and dietary habits were evaluated yearly in 98 male farmers from Moselle (East of France) before and after decreasing, in half of them, dietary saturated fats from 16.2% to 9.9% of calories (P/S from 0.32 to 0.97). One year after these dietary changes, cholesterol and triglycerides decreased by approximately 10%, platelet aggregation to thrombin by 81%, and their clotting activity by 30%. However, ADP aggregation was enhanced by 54%. At 2 yr the P/S was decreased to 0.7 and diet also modified in controls, with 18:2 being increased mostly in one group (P/S = 0.81) and 18:3 in another (P/S = 0.59). In both groups, the main platelet function tests were significantly depressed 1 yr later. Considering the whole study, the intake of saturated fat was mostly correlated (group and individual) with platelet aggregation to thrombin, platelet clotting activity, and 20:3 (n-9) in plasma and platelet lipids.
SummaryTo determine whether the long-term feeding of dietary fats affect platelet functions in man, platelet aggregation (to thrombin ADP, collagen, epinephrine) and clotting activity of platelet-rich plasma (PRP), platelet-poor plasma and of washed platelets, were studied in a mobile-laboratory in 44 healthy male farmers (40-45 years) from two French regions Var and Moselle, in relation to lipemia, glycemia, dietary nutriments, and platelet phospholipid composition. In the Moselle subjects, the platelet clotting activity of PRP and of washed platelets, the platelet aggregation to thrombin and ADP, were highly significantly (p <0.001) increased as compared to those of Var, but not the plasma cholesterol, which was identical in the two regions.In Moselle, the intake of total calories, total lipids and saturated fats was higher than in the Var.However, it was only with the saturated fat intake (mostly stearic acid) that the platelet clotting activity (p <0.01) and the platelet aggregation (p <0.001) were highly significantly correlated. The platelet clotting activity was also significantly (p <0.001) correlated with the fatty acid composition of the platelet phospholipid fractions phosphatidyl serine + phosphatidyl inositol.
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