We have studied the effect of diet therapy on plasma lipoprotein metabolism in heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. Seven patients with a mean plasma cholesterol concentration of 323 +/- 67 mg/dl were hospitalized and kept on a cholesterol-free diet for as long as 11 days without any medication. The content of dietary cholesterol was approximately 1.4 mg a day, and dietary fat, carbohydrate and protein comprised 18.0, 69.2 and 12.8% of calories, respectively. The ratio of polyunsaturated to saturated fatty acids (P/S) was 3.1. At the end of the study period, plasma cholesterol was lowered by 14.2%, from 323 to 277 mg/dl, and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol by 17.5% from 229 to 189 mg/dl. Using density gradient ultracentrifugation, the major change in LDL cholesterol was found to be in those fractions with a mean density between 1.034 and 1.042, where cholesterol concentrations decreased from 132 to 87 mg/dl (34%). These results indicate that diet therapy with free-cholesterol and a high ratio of P/S is highly effective in controlling plasma cholesterol levels in heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia.