Frontiers in Endocrinology (Dec 2023)

Thyroid markers and body composition predict LDL-cholesterol change in lean healthy women on a ketogenic diet: experimental support for the lipid energy model

  • Isabella D. Cooper,
  • Claudio Sanchez-Pizarro,
  • Claudio Sanchez-Pizarro,
  • Nicholas G. Norwitz,
  • David Feldman,
  • Yvoni Kyriakidou,
  • Kurtis Edwards,
  • Lucy Petagine,
  • Bradley T. Elliot,
  • Adrian Soto-Mota,
  • Adrian Soto-Mota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2023.1326768
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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IntroductionThere is a large heterogeneity in LDL-cholesterol change among individuals adopting ketogenic diets. Interestingly, lean metabolically healthy individuals seem to be particularly susceptible, with an inverse association between body mass index and LDL-cholesterol change. The lipid energy model proposes that, in lean healthy individuals, carbohydrate restriction upregulates systemic lipid trafficking to meet energy demands. To test if anthropometric and energy metabolism markers predict LDL-cholesterol change during carbohydrate restriction.MethodsTen lean, healthy, premenopausal women who habitually consumed a ketogenic diet for ≥6 months were engaged in a three-phase crossover study consisting of continued nutritional ketosis, suppression of ketosis with carbohydrate reintroduction, and return to nutritional ketosis. Each phase lasted 21 days. The predictive performance of all available relevant variables was evaluated with the linear mixed-effects models.ResultsAll body composition metrics, free T3 and total T4, were significantly associated with LDL-cholesterol change. In an interaction model with BMI and free T3, both markers were significant independent and interacting predictors of LDL-cholesterol change. Neither saturated fat, HOMA-IR, leptin, adiponectin, TSH, nor rT3 was associated with LDL-cholesterol changes.DiscussionAmong lean, healthy women undergoing carbohydrate restriction, body composition and energy metabolism markers are major drivers of LDL-cholesterol change, not saturated fat, consistent with the lipid energy model.

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