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In a message dated 7/2/02 7:09:09 PM, Gettingwell writes:

 

<< Re: CLA info wanted

 

 

Here are some notes from various sources that I collected a while back on CLA:

 

Liz

 

Health Benefits of CLA

 

Many people are taking CLA as an expensive supplement for the benefits

described below. But wouldn't it make much more sense to get it for free in

your food?

There is a new reason why it may be beneficial to allow cows to graze on

pasture. That reason involves a compound called conjugated linoleic acid

(CLA).

CLA is a fatty acid found in beef and dairy fats. Scientific interest in CLA

was stimulated in 1988 when a University of Wisconsin researcher discovered

its cancer-fighting properties in a study of rats fed fried hamburger. CLA

cannot be produced by the human body, but it can be obtained through foods

such as whole milk, butter, beef, and lamb.

" The interesting thing is that dairy cattle that graze produce higher amounts

of CLA in their milk than those which receive conserved feed, such as grain,

hay, and silage, " says Agricultural Research dairy scientist Larry Satter.

This is true even when the nongrazers eat pasture grass conserved as hay.

Satter, who is based at the Dairy Forage Research Center in Madison,

Wisconsin, conducted a study comparing the amount of CLA in milk from cows

grazing on pasture to the amount from cows fed hay or silage.

His findings:

Pasture-grazed cows had 500% more CLA in their milk than those fed silage.

Larry Satter is at the USDA-ARS U.S. Dairy Forage Research Center, 1950

Linden Lane, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706; phone (608)

264-5353, fax (608) 264-5147.

 

------

CLA may be one of the most potent cancer-fighting substances in our diet.

In animal studies, as little as one half of one percent CLA in the diet has

reduced tumor burden by more than 50 percent.

 

------

CLA has also been shown to reduce body fat in people who are overweight.

by Mary Shomon

A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study, published in the

December 2000 issue of the Journal of Nutrition found that CLA reduces fat

and preserves muscle tissue. According to the research project manager, an

average reduction of six pounds of body fat was found in the group that took

CLA, compared to a placebo group.

The study found that approximately 3.4 grams of CLA per day is the level

needed to obtain the beneficial effects of CLA on body fat.

Dr. Michael Pariza, who conducted research on CLA with the University of

Wisconsin-Madison, reported in August 2000 to the American Chemical Society

that " It doesn't make a big fat cell get little. What it rather does is keep

a little fat cell from getting big. "

Pariza's research did not find weight loss in his group of 71 overweight

people, but what he did find was that when the dieters stopped dieting, and

gained back weight, those taking CLA " were more likely to gain muscle and not

fat.'' In a separate study conducted at Purdue University in Indiana, CLA was

found to improve insulin levels in about two-thirds of diabetic patients, and

moderately reduced the blood glucose level and triglyceride levels.

CLA has been the subject of a variety of research in the past several years,

and findings also suggest that some of the other benefits of CLA include the

following:

 

 

* Increases metabolic rate --

* Decreases abdominal fat --

* Enhances muscle growth --

* Lowers cholesterol and triglycerides --

* Lowers insulin resistance --

* Reduces food-induced allergic reactions --

* Enhances immune system --

 

 

Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is a mixture of positional and geometric

isomers of linoleic acid, which is found preferentially in dairy products and

meat. Preliminary studies indicate that CLA is a powerful anticancer in the

rat breast tumor model with an effective range of 0.1-1% in the diet.

Conjugated linoleic acid is unique because it is present in food from animal

sources, and its anticancer efficacy is expressed at concentrations close to

human consumption levels.

Conjugated linoleic acid and atherosclerosis in rabbits Lee K.N.; Kritchevsky

D.; Pariza M.W. Food Research Institute, Dept. Food Microbiology/Toxicology,

University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1925 Willow Drive, Madison, WI 53706 USA

Atherosclerosis (Ireland), 1994, 108/1 (19-25)

 

 

Could a widespread deficiency of a specific nutrient be a major factor in

causing the excess body fat in many people? One hypothesis

Conjugated Linoleic Acid and the Weight Connection

Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is a component of beef and milk that has been

shown to reduce body fat in both animals and humans. CLA is essential for the

transport of dietary fat into cells, where it is used to build muscle and

produce energy. Fat that is not used for anabolic energy production is

converted into newly stored fat cells. There are published research findings

about how dietary CLA reduces body fat, but first let's take a look at why

many Americans are now deficient in CLA compared with their parents.

 

The primary dietary sources of CLA are beef and milk, and Americans are

eating less beef and drinking less whole milk in order to reduce their

dietary intake of saturated fat. People often drink nonfat milk, but it's the

fat content of the milk that contains CLA. Since skim milk contains virtually

no CLA, those seeking to lose weight, those who use skim milk, are depriving

themselves of a potential source of this fat-reducing nutrient.

 

Now, here's where the real problem occurs. In 1963, the CLA percentage in

milk was as high as 2.81%. By 1992, the percentage of CLA in dairy products

seldom exceeded 1%. The reason for the sharp reduction in milk CLA was

because of changing feeding patterns. Cows that eat natural grass produce

lots of CLA. Today's " efficient " feeding methods rely far less on natural

grass. For example, grass-fed Australian cows have 3 to 4 times as much CLA

in their meat as do American cows.

 

Researchers reported in June of 1999 in Biosciences, Biotechnology,

Biochemistry Journal that animal studies demonstrated that " CLA has an

obesity-preventing action. "

 

Another study reported that CLA effects on glucose tolerance and glucose

homeostasis indicate that dietary CLA may prove to be an important therapy

for the prevention and treatment of obesity (Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun.,

1998 [March]).

 

So health-conscious Americans are avoiding beef and whole milk because these

foods are high in fat, and, when people do consume beef or milk, they are

consuming very little CLA because of CLA-deficiency in today's cows. Thus,

most Americans have inadequate amounts of CLA in their diet, and this CLA

deficit may be at least partially responsible for the epidemic of overweight

people of all ages that now exists.

Encouraging Results with CLA

How significant is CLA in preventing excess accumulation of body fat? The

results to date are preliminary, but extremely encouraging.

 

Athletes are taking CLA to push glucose into their muscle cells and

connective tissues instead of letting it turn into fat. CLA has been shown to

reduce protein degradation in both humans and animals.

 

CLA is required to maintain optimal function of the phospholipid membranes of

cells. Healthy cell membranes will allow fat, protein, and carbohydrates to

flow into active cells such as muscle, connective tissue, and organ cells,

instead of being stored passively in fat cells. A deficiency of CLA can

inhibit fat from entering muscle cells, which can result in excessive

accumulation of body fat.

 

CLA has been studied in different species of animals, and the results

consistently show that CLA reduces the percentage of body fat. An abstract

from the 1996 Environmental Biology Conference showed that rats, after 28

days of being supplemented with CLA, showed a 58% reduction in body fat,

compared with the control animals which did not receive CLA. In addition, the

percentage of muscle was greater in the CLA group; CLA did not induce weight

loss, since muscle weighs more than fat.

 

In July 1997, the results of the first human study on CLA were released by

the Medstat Research Ltd. group of Lillesterom, Norway. This 3-month

preliminary study involved 20 healthy volunteers. Half the group was given

six 500-mg CLA capsules a day, and the other half received identical-looking

placebo capsules. The subjects were asked not to alter their diet or

lifestyle; 18 of the 20 subjects completed the study protocol. The results

showed that the people in the CLA group experienced a 15 to 20% reduction of

average body fat, compared with the placebo group. In the CLA group, the

initial body fat percentage was 21.3% at the beginning of the study, and only

17% body fat after 3 months on CLA capsules. In contrast, the placebo group

started with an average of 22% body fat, and 3 months later recorded an averag

e of 22.4% body fat.

 

CLA received widespread media attention in the early 1990s when it was

identified as a component of red meat that helps prevent cancer. Further

research showed that CLA is a potent anticancer agent, an anticatabolic agent

and, through a unique mechanism, a fat metabolizing agent. CLA is one of the

substances the FDA is investigating for disease prevention. New studies are

appearing about the ability of CLA to prevent cancer, and possibly function

as an adjuvant (assisting) cancer therapy. CLA appears to be especially

effective in preventing breast cancer.

 

Using CLA to reduce body fat may reduce your risk of getting cancer. Compare

this to FDA-approved diet drugs that were removed from the market after being

linked to heart-valve degeneration.

 

A deficiency of CLA in our diet may be a major factor in causing Americans to

gain so many fat pounds. CLA is a potent antioxidant, but appears to prevent

cancer via other mechanisms of action.

 

A dose of three 1000-mg capsules of 70% CLA, taken in the morning on an empty

stomach, may be an effective part of an overall weight-loss program. The

studies indicate that it usually takes about 3 weeks before body fat loss

occurs in response to CLA supplementation.

 

CLA inhibits fat storage by enhancing the ability of cell membranes (other

than fat cells) to open up and allow the absorption of fats and other

nutrients. CLA promotes the growth of muscles by letting nutrients into

active muscle cells. That's why CLA has become such a popular supplement

among body builders. The fat-reducing mechanism of CLA involves the

rejuvenation of cell membranes in the muscles and connective tissues to allow

fats to enter freely in order to generate energy and growth. This anabolic

effect could provide anti-aging benefits in the elderly, but there have been

no studies to date to investigate this.

Recent Findings on CLA

Several years ago, the discovery of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) caused a

scientific sensation. Here was a fatty acid found in red meat and cheese that

showed strong anticancer properties, being particularly effective in

inhibiting breast and prostate tumors, as well as colorectal, stomach, and

skin cancer, including melanoma. On the whole, scientists found CLA to be

more strongly anticarcinogenic than other fatty acids. What made CLA

especially unique is that even low concentrations significantly inhibited

cancer cell growth.

 

CLA supplementation was also shown to improve the ratio of lean mass to body

fat, decreasing fat deposition, especially on the abdomen, and enhancing

muscle growth. One way in which CLA reduces body fat is to enhance insulin

sensitivity so that fatty acids and glucose can pass through muscle cell

membranes and away from fat tissue. This results in an improved muscle-to-fat

ratio.

 

CLA was also shown to have antioxidant properties and to prevent muscle

wasting (an anticatabolic effect). It became popular with muscle builders

because of its ability to improve the transport of glucose, fatty acids, and

protein to the muscle tissue.

 

It is interesting that while it is chemically related to linolenic acid,

conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) appears to have opposite effects in certain

important areas. For instance, linolenic acid stimulates fat formation

(lipogenesis) in adipose tissue, while CLA inhibits fat formation; linolenic

acid tends to promote tumor growth, while CLA is an excellent inhibitor of

tumor growth; linolenic acid makes cholesterol more susceptible to oxidation,

while CLA makes cholesterol more stable.

 

One of the greatest problems with the Western diet during the last 50 years

has been excessive consumption of linoleic acid, due to the introduction of

margarine, seed oils, such as corn oil and safflower oil, and the modern

artificial livestock feeding methods that have raised the linoleic-acid

content of meat. At the same time, the consumption of beneficial fatty acids

such as omega-3 fats (fish, flax, and perilla) and CLA has gone down. Because

of the enormous impact that fatty acids have on our physiology, an excess of

linoleic acid combined with a deficiency of CLA could have far-reaching

effects on health and longevity. Let us now take a closer look at the current

research findings about CLA.

CLA Reduces Body Fat in Mice by up to 88%

A study at Louisiana State University confirmed that feeding male mice a

CLA-enriched diet (at 1% of the diet by weight, or 10 g/kg) for 6 weeks

resulted in 43 to 88% lower body fat, especially in regard to abdominal fat.

This occurred even if the mice were fed a high-fat diet. The effect was

partly due to reduced calorie intake by CLA-supplemented mice, and partly to

a shift in their metabolism, including a higher metabolic rate.

 

In another study, performed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, mice

supplemented with only 0.5% of CLA showed up to 60% lower body fat and up to

14% increased lean body mass compared to controls. The researchers discovered

that CLA-fed animals showed greater activity of enzymes involved in the

delivery of fatty acids to the muscle cells and the utilization of fat for

energy, while the enzymes facilitating fat deposition were inhibited.

CLA Improves Insulin Sensitivity

A study using diabetic Zucker rats indicates that part of CLA's effectiveness

in preventing obesity may lie in its ability to act as a potent insulin

sensitizer, thus lowering insulin resistance and consequently insulin levels.

Since elevated insulin is the chief pro-obesity agent, it is enormously

important to keep insulin within the normal range. By activating certain

enzymes and enhancing glucose transport into the cells, CLA acts to lower

blood sugar levels and normalize insulin levels.

 

Thus, besides being antiatherogenic and anti-carcinogenic, CLA is also

antidiabetogenic: it helps prevent adult-onset diabetes, characterized by

insulin resistance. If the current animal results are corroborated, CLA may

prove to be important not only in the prevention of diabetes, but also as a

new therapy for adult-onset diabetics, aimed at lowering insulin resistance.

 

 

CLA Inhibits the Growth of Prostate Cancer,

While Linoleic Acid Promotes It

Immunodeficient mice inoculated with human prostate cancer cells were fed

either a standard diet, a diet supplemented with 1% linolenic acid, or a diet

supplemented with 1% CLA. Mice receiving linolenic acid showed significantly

higher body weight and increased tumor load compared with the two other

groups. CLA-supplemented mice, on the other hand, showed the lowest tumor

load and a dramatic reduction in lung metastasis.

CLA Supplementation Helps Prevent the Initiation, Promotion, and Metastasis

of Breast Cancer

In a study performed at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, 50-day-old

rats were treated with a potent carcinogen and then supplemented with 1% CLA

for 4, 8, or 20 weeks. Only rats receiving CLA for the full 20 weeks showed

tumor inhibition. CLA lowered the total number of carcinomas by 70%.

Interestingly, there was a much higher incorporation of CLA into the neutral

lipids of the mammary tissue rather than into the phospholipids (cell

membranes). While the physiological significance of this phenomenon is not

understood, it seems that the presence of CLA in mammary tissue plays a

highly protective role against the initiation of breast cancer.

 

In another study, immunodeficient mice were fed 1% CLA-enriched diet for 2

weeks prior to inoculation with human breast adenocarcinoma cells. Besides

inhibiting tumor growth, CLA totally prevented the metastasis of breast

cancer to lungs and bone marrow.

 

The preventive effect of CLA against breast cancer is independent of the

amount of fat in the diet. Even when the tumor-promoting excess levels of

linoleic acid reach 12% in the diet, CLA was still incorporated into the

lipids of the mammary tissue and still provided protection against

carcinogenesis. Anticarcinogenic effects of CLA did not increase with doses

beyond 1% of CLA in the diet.

 

A recent in vitro study of breast cancer cells showed that CLA worked

synergistically with nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), a potent antioxidant

and lipoxygenase inhibitor found in the desert herb chaparral. This suggests

that one mechanism of CLA's suppression of tumor growth is its ability to

inhibit the production of leukotrienes, inflammatory compounds that may be

even more harmful and difficult to control than series II prostaglandins.

(Both series II prostaglandins and leukotrienes fuel tumor growth; both are

metabolites of arachidonic fatty acid, itself a metabolite of linoleic acid.)

 

Yet another mechanism of CLA's anticancer action may be its interference with

tumor-growth factors such as thymidine.

 

CLA is especially effective in inhibiting the proliferation of

estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer cells, arresting estrogen-dependent

cell division.

 

Besides the oncostatic properties of CLA, it is also likely that CLA inhibits

the enzymes that activate various carcinogens. Thus, CLA appears to protect

against all three stages of cancer: initiation, promotion, and metastasis.

Early CLA Supplementation Lowers the

Glandular Density in Mammary Tissue

Previous research showed that supplementation with CLA during the formative

period in mammary-gland development confers a lasting protection against

carcinogen-induced breast cancer. A new and more detailed study showed that

female rats fed 1% CLA diet after weaning showed a 20% reduction in the

density of the ductal-lobular tree, meaning that the glandular density of the

mammaries was lower. High glandular density is a very significant breast

cancer risk factor. This study implies that supplementing the diet of young

girls with CLA might reduce the glandular density of their breast tissue,

conferring a significant degree of life-long protection against breast

cancer.

Immune-Enhancing Effects of CLA

CLA has been found to stimulate the production of lymphocytes and of

interleukin-2, and to increase the levels of certain immunoglobulins, while

lowering the release of immunoglobulin E, associated with allergies.

 

Improved immune function resulting from CLA supplementation can also be

postulated on the basis of its ability to lower the production of

immunosuppressive compounds such as leukotrienes and series II

prostaglandins, and to improve insulin sensitivity (elevated insulin leads to

immunosuppression).

 

The anti-obesity benefits of CLA do not necessarily manifest themselves as

weight loss. Rather, CLA works through the process of " repartitioning, " which

results in improved muscle-to-fat ratio. Since CLA causes a loss of body fat,

especially abdominal fat, while simultaneously stimulating muscle growth, the

effect is a leaner, more muscular physique. This is much more beneficial than

starvation diets, which cause a greater loss of muscle mass than of body fat,

setting the stage for sluggish metabolism and even greater future obesity.

Anti-Atherogenic Effects of CLA

We have already mentioned that CLA improves insulin sensitivity. Since

elevated insulin promotes atherosclerosis, any agent that lowers insulin

levels by improving insulin sensitivity can be classified as

anti-atherogenic. However, CLA has also been shown to have further

anti-atherogenic benefits thanks to its ability to improve serum lipids and

to its tocopherol (vitamin E)-sparing effect.

CLA Lowers Cholesterol and Triglycerides,

Helps Keep Arteries Clean

A study at the University of Wisconsin-Madison found that rabbits

supplemented with 0.5 g CLA per day showed markedly lower total and LDL

cholesterol, lower LDL-to-HDL ratio, lower total cholesterol-to-HDL ratio,

and lower serum triglycerides. On autopsy, the aortas of CLA-supplemented

rabbits showed less atherosclerotic plaque.

 

A more recent study done at the University of Massachusetts confirmed that

hamsters whose diets were supplemented with CLA showed significantly lower

total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides compared to controls.

The serum of CLA-fed hamsters also showed higher tocopherol/ cholesterol

ratios, indicating that CLA has a tocopherol-sparing effect (that is, being

less oxidizable than linoleic acid, it does not require as much vitamin E for

antioxidant protection).

 

It is not cholesterol per se, but oxidized cholesterol that is harmful to the

blood vessels. The oxidizability of cholesterol varies mainly in propor-tion

to the percentage of linoleic acid that it contains; thus the more stable

fatty acids, such as CLA, that can be incorporated into cholesterol serve to

make it less vulnerable. CLA's antioxidant properties may also play a role in

its ability to help keep the blood vessels clean.

 

As a side note, CLA tends to be incorporated more abundantly into the cell

and mitochondrial membranes of the heart muscle. Since the heart relies on

fatty acids rather than glucose as its energy source, greater abundance of

CLA in the heart muscle may improve the efficiency of fat transport and fat

metabolism in the cardiac mitochondria.

Possible Anti-Osteoporotic Effects of CLA

An in vitro study done at Purdue University showed that in various rat tissue

cultures, including bone tissue, supplemental CLA (at 1% of diet) decreased

the levels of omega-6 fatty acids and total monosaturated fatty acids, while

increasing the concentrations of omega-3 fatty acids and saturated acids. The

levels of inflammatory series II prostaglandins were also decreased by CLA

feeding. Since inflammatory compounds lead to bone loss, CLA might

potentially be of use in preventing osteoporosis.

 

We are gaining more and more understanding of the importance of beneficial

fatty acids for bone health. Unfortunately, women aren't being told about the

need to consume adequate amounts of healthy fats in order to prevent bone

loss.

Recognizing the Importance of Essential Oils

Not long ago the low-fat diet gurus were trying to terrorize us into paring

down all fat consumption. Now that we have witnessed the epidemic of obesity

that followed, we know better. Healthy fats help keep us slender! They also

help protect against atherosclerosis, cancer, diabetes, autoimmune diseases,

and various other degenerative disorders.

 

Through their impact on important metabolic enzymes, healthy fats increase

the synthesis of beneficial prostaglandins while decreasing the levels of

inflammatory prostaglandins; they also modify cell membrane composition and

fluidity. Hence, improved blood flow and tissue oxygenation, higher metabolic

rate, improved insulin sensitivity, immune enhancement, more muscle and bone

formation, better brain function and faster nerve impulse conductance result,

to mention just a few of the major benefits.

 

Thus, while in the 70s and 80s dietary fat was demonized and presented as the

problem, in the 90s we are beginning to see various kinds of healthy fat as

part of the solution.

 

CLA is the collective name for a group of linoleic acid derivatives found

chiefly in beef, lamb, and dairy fat. When ruminants such as cattle and sheep

consume linoleic acid (an essential polyunsaturated fatty acid) in grass or

feed, the bacteria in their stomachs convert some of that linoleic acid to

its variant forms, or isomers (two isomers-cis-9, trans-11 and cis-12,

trans-10-predominate; the 9,11 isomer is thought to be the most biologically

active). Adding certain strains of starter culture bacteria to dairy products

can also increase the content of conjugated linoleic acids-generally spoken

of in the singular, much as we use the word " estrogen " to denote the whole

family of various estrogens.

 

It turns out that the intestinal bacteria of rats are also capable of

producing CLA out of linoleic acid. At this point, however, it is not known

whether human intestinal flora can produce CLA.

 

The most studied and best understood mechanisms of CLA's benefits involve its

modulation of eicosanoid (prostaglandin and leukotriene) synthesis and its

cell-membrane effects.

 

A study of liver fatty acids in CLA-supplemented mice showed that CLA has

powerful effects on the fatty-acid composition of neutral lipids and

phospholipids (phospholipids are the building materials of cell membranes and

membranes surrounding cellular organelles such as mitochondria). CLA lowers

the levels of linoleic acid in phospholids; in neutral lipids, CLA lowers the

levels of linoleic and arachidonic fatty acid, while increasing the more

stable oleic acid. Other studies have found that CLA lowers the production of

the inflammatory metabolites of arachidonic acid: leukotrienes and PGE2

(series II) prostaglandins.

 

CLA's ability to inhibit the production of leukotrienes is of particular

interest. While various hormones and many other biochemical modulators

inhibit the release of inflammatory prostaglandins, it is difficult to lower

leukotriene levels-except by using cortisone and cortisone-like drugs, with

their harmful side effects. CLA is a promising, nontoxic alternative.

 

Insofar as CLA is incorporated into phospholipids, it affects the transport

properties of cell membranes and mitochondrial membranes. Apparently CLA

facilitates the transport of glucose and fatty acids for energy, and of

protein for muscle-building.

 

There is still much about CLA that needs further investigation. Part of its

metabolism involves being desaturated into an as-yet unnamed fatty acid that

may be analogous to gamma-linolenic acid (GLA). CLA and its metabolites seem

to affect many important metabolic enzymes. A more detailed understanding of

the mechanisms of CLA's action should help us develop ways of using it for

maximum benefits. The common assumption is that we need to obtain CLA from

diet or supplements. Commercial CLA supplements are manufactured by a special

treatment (isomerization) of sunflower oil.

The Safety of CLA

In a study conducted by the Nutrition Department of Kraft Foods, male rats

were fed a diet of 1.5% CLA, which is 50 times higher than the estimated

upper-range human intake. The animals were examined weekly for any signs of

toxicity; no toxicity was found. After the end of the 36-week study, the

animals were sacrificed and autopsied. Again, no pathology was found. The

study confirmed that CLA supplementation is safe even at high doses.

Nevertheless, high doses are not necessary for obtaining the benefits of CLA.

 

Most people obtain their essential omega-3 fatty acids from flax, fish, or

perilla oils. CLA appears to be in a class by itself as far as its unique

mechanism of disease prevention and bodyfat reduction. A deficiency of CLA in

the diet may be a major factor in causing Americans to gain so many fat

pounds. CLA is a potent antioxidant, but appears to prevent cancer via other

mechanisms of action. A particularly rich source of CLA is melted cheddar

cheese, yet most consumers prefer to obtain this fatty acid from low-cost CLA

supplements that provide the exact isomers that have shown the greatest

levels of protection against disease and obesity.

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