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The Truth About Saturated Fat
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By Mary Enig, PhD, and Sally Fallon
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Fats from animal and vegetable sources provide a concentrated source
of energy in the diet; they also provide the building blocks for
cell membranes and a variety of hormones and hormone-like
substances. Fats as part of a meal slow down absorption so that we
can go longer without feeling hungry. In addition, they act as
carriers for important fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E and K. Dietary
fats are needed for the conversion of carotene to vitamin A, for
mineral absorption and for a host of other processes.
Politically Correct Nutrition is based on the assumption that we
should reduce our intake of fats, particularly saturated fats from
animal sources. Fats from animal sources also contain cholesterol,
presented as the twin villain of the civilized diet.
The Lipid Hypothesis
The theory-called the lipid hypothesis-that there is a direct
relationship between the amount of saturated fat and cholesterol in
the diet and the incidence of coronary heart disease was proposed by
a researcher named Ancel Keys in the late 1950's. Numerous
subsequent studies have questioned his data and conclusions.
Nevertheless, Keys' articles received far more publicity than those
presenting alternate views.
The vegetable oil and food processing
industries, the main beneficiaries of any research that found fault
with competing traditional foods, began promoting and funding
further research designed to support the lipid hypothesis.
The most well-known advocate of the lowfat diet was Nathan Pritikin.
Actually, Pritikin advocated elimination of sugar, white flour and
all processed foods from the diet and recommended the use of fresh
raw foods, whole grains and a strenuous exercise program; but it was
the lowfat aspects of his regime that received the most attention in
the media. Adherents found that they lost weight and that their
blood cholesterol levels and blood pressure declined.
The success of the Pritikin diet was probably due to a number of
factors having nothing to do with reduction in dietary fat-weight
loss alone, for example, will precipitate a reduction in blood
cholesterol levels-but
Pritikin soon found that the fat-free
diet presented many problems, not the least of which was the fact
that people just could not stay on it. Those who possessed enough
will power to remain fat-free for any length of time developed a
variety of health problems including low energy, difficulty in
concentration, depression, weight gain and mineral deficiencies.1
Pritikin may have saved himself from
heart disease but his lowfat diet did not spare him from cancer. He
died, in the prime of life, of suicide when he realized that his
Spartan regime was not curing his leukemia. We shouldn't have to die
of either heart disease or cancer-or consume a diet that makes us
depressed.
When problems with the no-fat regime
became apparent, Pritikin introduced a small amount of fat from
vegetable sources into his diet-something like 10% of the total
caloric intake. Today the Diet Dictocrats advise us to limit fats to
25-30% of the caloric intake, which is about 2 1/2 ounces or 5
tablespoons per day for a diet of 2400 calories. A careful reckoning
of fat intake and avoidance of animal fats, they say, is the key to
perfect health.
The "Evidence" Supporting The Lipid Hypothesis
These "experts" assure us that the lipid hypothesis is backed by
incontrovertible scientific proof. Most people would be surprised to
learn that there is, in fact, very little evidence to support the
contention that a diet low in cholesterol and saturated fat actually
reduces death from heart disease or in any way increases one's life
span. Consider the following:
Before 1920 coronary heart disease was
rare in America; so rare that when a young internist named Paul
Dudley White introduced the German electrocardiograph to his
colleagues at Harvard University, they advised him to concentrate on
a more profitable branch of medicine.
The new machine revealed the presence
of arterial blockages, thus permitting early diagnosis of coronary
heart disease. But in those days clogged arteries were a medical
rarity, and White had to search for patients who could benefit from
his new technology. During the next forty years, however, the
incidence of coronary heart disease rose dramatically, so much so
that by the mid fifties heart disease was the leading cause of death
among Americans.
Today heart disease causes at least 40% of all US deaths. If, as we
have been told, heart disease results from the consumption of
saturated fats, one would expect to find a corresponding increase in
animal fat in the American diet. Actually, the reverse is true.
During the sixty-year period from 1910 to 1970, the proportion of
traditional animal fat in the American diet declined from 83% to
62%, and butter consumption plummeted from eighteen pounds per
person per year to four.
During the past eighty years, dietary
cholesterol intake has increased only 1%. During the same period the
percentage of dietary vegetable oils in the form of margarine,
shortening and refined oils increased about 400% while the
consumption of sugar and processed foods increased about 60%.2
The Framingham Heart Study is often cited as proof of the lipid
hypothesis. This study began in 1948 and involved some 6,000 people
from the town of Framingham, Massachusetts. Two groups were compared
at five-year intervals-those who consumed little cholesterol and
saturated fat and those who consumed large amounts. After 40 years,
the director of this study had to admit:
"In Framingham, Mass, the more saturated fat one ate, the more
cholesterol one ate, the more calories one ate, the lower the
person's serum cholesterol..."
We found that the people who ate the most cholesterol, ate the most
saturated fat, ate the most calories, weighed the least and were the
most physically active."3 The study did show that those who weighed
more and had abnormally high blood cholesterol levels were slightly
more at risk for future heart disease; but weight gain and
cholesterol levels had an inverse correlation with fat and
cholesterol intake in the diet.4
In a multi-year British study
involving several thousand men, half were asked to reduce saturated
fat and cholesterol in their diets, to stop smoking and to increase
the amounts of unsaturated oils such as margarine and vegetable
oils.
After one year, those on the "good" diet had 100% more deaths than
those on the "bad" diet, in spite of the fact that those men on the
"bad" diet continued to smoke! But in describing the study, the
author ignored these results in favor of the politically correct
conclusion: "The implication for public health policy in the U.K. is
that a preventive program such as we evaluated in this trial is
probably effective. . . ."5
The U.S. Multiple Risk Factor
Intervention Trial, (MRFIT) sponsored by the National Heart, Lung
and Blood Institute, compared mortality rates and eating habits of
over 12,000 men. Those with "good" dietary habits (reduced saturated
fat and cholesterol, reduced smoking, etc.) showed a marginal
reduction in total coronary heart disease, but their overall
mortality from all causes was higher.
Similar results have been obtained in several other studies. The few
studies that indicate a correlation between fat reduction and a
decrease in coronary heart disease mortality also document a
concurrent increase in deaths from cancer, brain hemorrhage, suicide
and violent death.6
The Lipid Research Clinics Coronary Primary Prevention Trial (LRC-CPPT),
which cost 150 million dollars, is the study most often cited by the
experts to justify lowfat diets. Actually, dietary cholesterol and
saturated fat were not tested in this study as all subjects were
given a low-cholesterol, low-saturated-fat diet.
Instead, the study tested the effects of a cholesterol-lowering
drug. Their statistical analysis of the results implied a 24%
reduction in the rate of coronary heart disease in the group taking
the drug compared with the placebo group; however, nonheart disease
deaths in the drug group increased-deaths from cancer, stroke,
violence and suicide.7
Even the conclusion that lowering
cholesterol reduces heart disease is suspect.
Independent researchers who tabulated the results of this study
found no significant statistical difference in coronary heart
disease death rates between the two groups.8 However, both the
popular press and medical journals touted the LRC-CPPT as the
long-sought proof that animal fats are the cause of heart disease,
America's number one killer.
Studies That Challenge The Lipid Hypothesis
While it is true that researchers have induced heart disease in some
animals by giving them extremely large dosages of oxidized or rancid
cholesterol-amounts ten times that found in the ordinary human
diet-several population studies squarely contradict the
cholesterol-heart disease connection.
A survey of 1700 patients with hardening of the arteries, conducted
by the famous heart surgeon Michael DeBakey, found no relationship
between the level of cholesterol in the blood and the incidence of
atherosclerosis.9
A survey of South Carolina adults found no correlation of blood
cholesterol levels with "bad" dietary habits, such as use of red
meat, animal fats, fried foods, butter, eggs, whole milk, bacon,
sausage and cheese.10 A Medical Research Council survey showed that
men eating butter ran half the risk of developing heart disease as
those using margarine.11
Mother's milk provides a higher
proportion of cholesterol than almost any other food. It also
contains over 50% of its calories as fat, much of it saturated fat.
Both cholesterol and saturated fat are essential for growth in
babies and children, especially the development of the brain.12 Yet,
the American Heart Association is now recommending a
low-cholesterol, lowfat diet for children! Commercial formulas are
low in saturated fats and soy formulas are devoid of cholesterol. A
recent study linked lowfat diets with failure to thrive in
children.13
Numerous surveys of traditional populations have yielded information
that is an embarrassment to the Diet Dictocrats. For example, a
study comparing Jews when they lived in Yemen, whose diets contained
fats solely of animal origin, to Yemenite Jews living in Israel,
whose diets contained margarine and vegetable oils, revealed little
heart disease or diabetes in the former group but high levels of
both diseases in the latter.14 (The study also noted that the
Yemenite Jews consumed no sugar but those in Israel consumed sugar
in amounts equaling 25-30% of total carbohydrate intake.)
A comparison of populations in northern and southern India revealed
a similar pattern. People in northern India consume 17 times more
animal fat but have an incidence of coronary heart disease seven
times lower than people in southern India.15 The Masai and kindred
tribes of Africa subsist largely on milk, blood and beef. They are
free from coronary heart disease and have excellent blood
cholesterol levels.16
Eskimos eat liberally of animal fats from fish and marine animals.
On their native diet they are free of disease and exceptionally
hardy.17 An extensive study of diet and disease patterns in China
found that the region in which the populace consumes large amounts
of whole milk had half the rate of heart disease as several
districts in which only small amounts of animal products are
consumed.18
Several Mediterranean societies have low rates of heart disease even
though fat-including highly saturated fat from lamb, sausage and
goat cheese-comprises up to 70% of their caloric intake. The
inhabitants of Crete, for example, are remarkable for their good
health and longevity.19 A study of Puerto Ricans revealed that,
although they consume large amounts of animal fat, they have a very
low incidence of colon and breast cancer.20
A study of the long-lived inhabitants of Soviet Georgia revealed
that those who eat the most fatty meat live the longest.21 In
Okinawa, where the average life span for women is 84 years-longer
than in Japan-the inhabitants eat generous amounts of pork and
seafood and do all their cooking in lard.22 None of these studies is
mentioned by those urging restriction of saturated fats.
The relative good health of the Japanese, who have the longest life
span of any nation in the world, is generally attributed to a lowfat
diet. Although the Japanese eat few dairy fats, the notion that
their diet is low in fat is a myth; rather, it contains moderate
amounts of animal fats from eggs, pork, chicken, beef, seafood and
organ meats. With their fondness for shellfish and fish broth, eaten
on a daily basis, the Japanese probably consume more cholesterol
than most Americans.
What they do not consume is a lot of vegetable oil, white flour or
processed food (although they do eat white rice.) The life span of
the Japanese has increased since World War II with an increase in
animal fat and protein in the diet.23 Those who point to Japanese
statistics to promote the lowfat diet fail to mention that the Swiss
live almost as long on one of the fattiest diets in the world. Tied
for third in the longevity stakes are Austria and Greece-both with
high-fat diets.24
As a final example, let us consider the French. Anyone who has eaten
his way across France has observed that the French diet is just
loaded with saturated fats in the form of butter, eggs, cheese,
cream, liver, meats and rich patés. Yet the French have a lower rate
of coronary heart disease than many other western countries.
In the United States, 315 of every 100,000 middle-aged men die of
heart attacks each year; in France the rate is 145 per 100,000. In
the Gascony region, where goose and duck liver form a staple of the
diet, this rate is a remarkably low 80 per 100,000.25 This
phenomenon has recently gained international attention as the French
Paradox. (The French do suffer from many degenerative diseases,
however. They eat large amounts of sugar and white flour and in
recent years have succumbed to the timesaving temptations of
processed foods.)
A chorus of establishment voices, including the American Cancer
Society, the National Cancer Institute and the Senate Committee on
Nutrition and Human Needs, claims that animal fat is linked not only
with heart disease but also with cancers of various types. Yet when
researchers from the University of Maryland analyzed the data they
used to make such claims, they found that vegetable fat consumption
was correlated with cancer and animal fat was not.26
Understanding The Chemistry Of Fats
Clearly something is wrong with the theories we read in the popular
press-and used to bolster sales of lowfat concoctions and
cholesterol-free foods. The notion that saturated fats per se cause
heart disease as well as cancer is not only facile, it is just plain
wrong. But it is true that some fats are bad for us. In order to
understand which ones, we must know something about the chemistry of
fats.
Fats-or lipids-are a class of organic substances that are not
soluble in water. In simple terms, fatty acids are chains of carbon
atoms with hydrogen atoms filling the available bonds. Most fat in
our bodies and in the food we eat is in the form of triglycerides,
that is, three fatty-acid chains attached to a glycerol molecule.
Elevated triglycerides in the blood have been positively linked to
proneness to heart disease, but these triglycerides do not come
directly from dietary fats; they are made in the liver from any
excess sugars that have not been used for energy. The source of
these excess sugars is any food containing carbohydrates,
particularly refined sugar and white flour.
Fatty Acid Classifications By Saturation
Fatty acids are classified in the following way:
Saturated: A fatty acid is saturated when all available
carbon bonds are occupied by a hydrogen atom. They are highly
stable, because all the carbon-atom linkages are filled-or
saturated-with hydrogen. This means that they do not normally go
rancid, even when heated for cooking purposes. They are straight in
form and hence pack together easily, so that they form a solid or
semisolid fat at room temperature. Your body makes saturated fatty
acids from carbohydrates and they are found in animal fats and
tropical oils.
Monounsaturated: Monounsaturated fatty acids have one double
bond in the form of two carbon atoms double-bonded to each other
and, therefore, lack two hydrogen atoms. Your body makes
monounsaturated fatty acids from saturated fatty acids and uses them
in a number of ways.
Monounsaturated fats have a kink or bend at the position of the
double bond so that they do not pack together as easily as saturated
fats and, therefore, tend to be liquid at room temperature. Like
saturated fats, they are relatively stable. They do not go rancid
easily and hence can be used in cooking. The monounsaturated fatty
acid most commonly found in our food is oleic acid, the main
component of olive oil as well as the oils from almonds, pecans,
cashews, peanuts and avocados.
Polyunsaturated: Polyunsaturated fatty acids have two or more
pairs of double bonds and, therefore, lack four or more hydrogen
atoms. The two polyunsaturated fatty acids found most frequently in
our foods are double unsaturated linoleic acid, with two double
bonds-also called omega-6; and triple unsaturated linolenic acid,
with three double bonds-also called omega-3. (The omega number
indicates the position of the first double bond.)
Your body cannot make these fatty acids and hence they are called
"essential." We must obtain our essential fatty acids or EFA's from
the foods we eat. The polyunsaturated fatty acids have kinks or
turns at the position of the double bond and hence do not pack
together easily. They are liquid, even when refrigerated.
The unpaired electrons at the double bonds makes these oils highly
reactive.
They go rancid easily, particularly omega-3 linolenic acid, and must
be treated with care. Polyunsaturated oils should never be heated or
used in cooking. In nature, the polyunsaturated fatty acids are
usually found in the cis form, which means that both hydrogen atoms
at the double bond are on the same side.
All fats and oils, whether of vegetable or animal origin, are some
combination of saturated fatty acids, monounsaturated fatty acids
and polyunsaturated linoleic acid and linolenic acid. In general,
animal fats such as butter, lard and tallow contain about 40-60%
saturated fat and are solid at room temperature.
Vegetable oils from northern climates contain a preponderance of
polyunsaturated fatty acids and are liquid at room temperature. But
vegetable oils from the tropics are highly saturated. Coconut oil,
for example, is 92% saturated. These fats are liquid in the tropics
but hard as butter in northern climes. Vegetable oils are more
saturated in hot climates because the increased saturation helps
maintain stiffness in plant leaves. Olive oil with its preponderance
of oleic acid is the product of a temperate climate. It is liquid at
warm temperatures but hardens when refrigerated.
From:
Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically
Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats by Sally Fallon
with Mary G. Enig, PhD (NewTrends Publishing 2000,
www.newtrendspublishing.com 877-707-1776)
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