Studies to investigate the absorption and excretion of shea oleine sterols in rat and man

Int J Toxicol. 2002 Sep-Oct;21(5):353-9. doi: 10.1080/10915810290096568.

Abstract

Shea oleine (SU), an oil fraction derived from the nut of the African tree, Butyrospermum parkii, is used as a frying oil and, after hardening (SH), in margarine and toffee fat. Both SU and SH contain a high level (approximately 8%) of 4,4-dimethylsterols (4,4-DMS), mostly as esters of cinnamic acid. As part of a series of studies evaluating SU, investigations to study rat and human dietary utilization were carried out. These comprised fecal fat analysis of groups of Wistar rats and a small number (four subjects) of human volunteers. Groups of rats were administered SU in a semisynthetic diet over 3 weeks at up to 20% in the diet (approximately 10 g/kg/day). In the human study, four male volunteers consumed a single 25-g portion of SU (approximately 0.4 g/kg) and ate no other vegetable fat during the course of the study. No preferential absorption of any of the 4,4-DMS occurred in the rat or man. Apparent absorption of the most prominent sterol fraction in the unsaponifiable material, 4,4-DMS, as estimated by its disappearance from feces, was similar in both species (27% to 52% in the rat compared with 13% to 49% in human subjects). Both rats and humans showed a similar profile of dietary and fecal 4,4-DMS fraction sterol components.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Dietary Fats, Unsaturated / administration & dosage
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Drug Administration Routes
  • Feces / chemistry
  • Female
  • Food, Formulated
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Nuts / chemistry*
  • Oleic Acids / administration & dosage
  • Oleic Acids / pharmacokinetics*
  • Plant Oils / administration & dosage
  • Plant Oils / pharmacokinetics*
  • Rats
  • Rats, Wistar
  • Species Specificity
  • Sterols / metabolism

Substances

  • Dietary Fats, Unsaturated
  • Oleic Acids
  • Plant Oils
  • Sterols
  • shea oleine