A systematic review 1 including 67 controlled trials with a total of 2,990 subjects was abstracted in DARE. There were 25 trials of oat products, 17 of psyllium, 7 of pectin, and 18 or guar gum. Soluble fibre (2 - 10 G/day) was associated with small but statistically significant decreases in total cholesterol (-0.045 mmol/L per gram soluble fibre, 95% CI -0.054 to -0.035) and LDL cholesterol (-0.057 mmol/L per gram soluble fibre, 95% CI -0.070 to -0.044). The effects of different fibres were not significantly different. As an example, 3 servomgs of oatmeal (28 grams of soluble fibre each) can decrease total and LDL cholesterol approximately 0.13 mmol/L.
Another systematic review 2 on psyllium-enriched cereals including 11 studies with a total of 404 subjects was abstracted in DARE. Participants who ate a psyllium cereal had lower total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol concentrations than subjects who ate the control cereal (mean difference in TC -0.31, 95% CI -0.37 to -0.25) and in LDL-C -0.35, 95% CI -0.40 to -0.29). The HDL cholesterol levels were unchanged.
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