SIMILARITY IN GALLSTONE FORMATION FROM 900 KCAL DAY DIETS CONTAINING 16 G VS 30 G OF DAILY FAT - EVIDENCE THAT FAT RESTRICTION IS NOT THE MAIN CULPRIT OF CHOLELITHIASIS DURING RAPID WEIGHT-REDUCTION/
Wc. Vezina et al., SIMILARITY IN GALLSTONE FORMATION FROM 900 KCAL DAY DIETS CONTAINING 16 G VS 30 G OF DAILY FAT - EVIDENCE THAT FAT RESTRICTION IS NOT THE MAIN CULPRIT OF CHOLELITHIASIS DURING RAPID WEIGHT-REDUCTION/, Digestive diseases and sciences, 43(3), 1998, pp. 554-561
Diets containing essentially no fat, 1-2 g fat per day, have resulted
in cholesterol gallstones. Greater fat may result in less gallbladder
stasis. Do gallstones form with greater fat content? We studied 272 mo
derately obese subjects who had normal gallbladder ultrasonograms. The
900 kcal/day liquid diets contained either 16 g fat (N = 94) or 30 g
fat (N = 178) each day for 13 weeks. A second gallbladder ultrasound w
as performed. Sixteen of 94 (17.0%) of the 16-g fat group developed st
ones with a weight loss of 18 (+/-7) kg and a body mass index (BMI) de
crease of 6 (+/-2) kg/m. Twenty of 178 (11.2%) of the 30-g fat group d
eveloped stones (P = 0.18, no difference in stone formation) with simi
lar weight loss of 20 (+/-7) kg (P = 0.08) and BMI decrease of 7 (+/-2
) kg/m(2) (P = 0.04). Substantial fat for rapid weight-reducing diets
resulted in gallstone formation. Since experiments have shown that our
higher fat diet, containing 10 g fat per. meal, results in maximal ga
llbladder emptying, cholelithiasis from rapid weight loss may not be s
olely attributable to gallbladder stasis.