|
prostitutes, vegetarian, plump princess , control, graduate, headline, hours postchallenge, fatty acid molecule , longevity, metagenics, treatment, robert winston, plump lips , immunization, headlines, academic, august 2005 cover story: jane seymour - actress, information omega3, plump ladies , darshan, animal evaluation, vitamine, personal, laboratory,
|
1995a), and the coronary artery lesions will show essentially all of the characteristics seen in atherosclerosis in humans (Rudel bovine mastitis et al., 1995b). Nonhuman-primate diets enriched in n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids appear to protect against coronary bovine mastitis arterial atherosclerosis, whereas diets enriched in saturated and monounsaturated bovine mastitis fatty acids appear to promote the disease, as demonstrated in several studies (Rudel et al., 1995a; Rudel et al., 1995b; Rudel et al., 1998; Wolfe et al., 1994). The phytoestrogen content of soy is protective, and the primate model has been useful in clarifying these effects (Anthony et al., 1997; Clarkson et al., 2001). The lesson to be taken from those studies is that many species of nonhuman primates have a diet-related susceptibility to atherosclerosis similar to that of humans and so can constitute good models for studying the mechanisms of atherosclerosis. In general, these man-prepared diets are well tolerated; and in some studies in which offspring were born and raised, body weight and size were normal to large relative to those of comparable animals from the wild (Wolfe et al.,
|