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Stanford Prevention Research Center and the Department of Medicine, Stanford University Medical School, Stanford
Department of Nutrition, Loma Linda University (M.M.), California
Cancer Research Center of Hawai'I, Honolulu, Hawaii (A.A.F.)
Address correspondence to: Christopher D. Gardner, Ph.D., Hoover Pavilion, N229, 211 Quarry Road, Stanford, CA 94305-5705. E-mail: cgardner{at}stanford.edu
Objective: To compare the effects of two commercially available soy milks (one made using whole soy beans, the other using soy protein isolate) with low-fat dairy milk on plasma lipid, insulin, and glucose responses.
Design: Randomized clinical trial, cross-over design.
Subjects: Participants were 30–65 years of age, n = 28, with pre-study LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C) concentrations of 160–220 mg/dL, not on lipid lowering medications, and with an overall Framingham risk score of
10%.
Intervention: Participants were required to consume sufficient milk to provide 25 g protein/d from each source. The protocol included three 4-week treatment phases, each separated from the next by a wash-out period of
4 weeks.
Results: Mean LDL-C concentration at the end of each phase (± SD) was 161 ± 20, 161 ± 26 and 170 ± 24 mg/dL for the whole bean soy milk, the soy protein isolate milk, and the dairy milk, respectively (p = 0.9 between soy milks, p = 0.02 for each soy milk vs. dairy milk). No significant differences by type of milk were observed for HDL-cholesterol, triacylglycerols, insulin, or glucose.
Conclusion: A 25 g dose of daily soy protein from soy milk led to a modest 5% lowering of LDL-C relative to dairy milk among adults with elevated LDL-C. The effect did not differ by type of soy milk and neither soy milk significantly affected other lipid variables, insulin or glucose.
Key words: soy protein, soy milk, lipids, LDL-cholesterol, hypercholesterolemic adults
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