Health Hotline Magazine | February 2024

For references, email customerservice@naturalgrocers.com As with most things in life, balance is key. Start reading labels—once you start looking for vegetable oils, you will find them everywhere (I recently found soybean oil in the ingredient list of Italian sausage). In general, most processed foods (packaged snacks, cookies, salad dressings, crackers, chips, etc.) will contain some type of vegetable oil. The same goes for fast food and restaurant food. Avoid these as much as possible. At home, choose oils such as coconut oil, butter, avocado oil, and extra virgin olive oil for cooking. Last but not least, take a quality omega-3 fish oil supplement. The large majority of us simply don’t eat enough cold-water fatty fish (one of the main food sources of omega-3s) to get optimal amounts. A supplement will ensure that you saturate your cell membranes with the good stuff! Natural Grocers ® | 39 A review published in 2018 in the journal Open Heart presented research that showed that vegetable oils may actually drive the development of atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease in part by promoting oxidative damage and inflammation in the endothelium (the lining of our blood vessels) and increasing the oxidation of LDL cholesterol. Other research has similar findings, showing that the consumption of vegetable oils high in omega-6 fats increase inflammation in the aorta and endothelium, contribute to low-grade inflammation, oxidative stress, and endothelial dysfunction. Omega-6 a Root Cause of Degenerative Diseases A 2020 review investigated vegetable oil’s potential role in the development of lifestyle diseases including obesity, type-2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and Alzheimer’s by increasing damage to cells. The review describes how vegetable oils like canola, soybean, and sunflower create a substance called hydroxynonenal when heated, which researchers believe plays a key role in cell degeneration and death. Further, even vegetable oils that are not deep fried (like those found in mayonnaise, salad dressing, etc.) will be incorporated into cell membranes and LDL cholesterol, where they increase inflammation and oxidative damage. The researchers conclude that decreasing the consumption of omega-6 oils while increasing the consumption of omega-3 oils is critical in preventing various lifestyle diseases. This is key because both types of fat compete for space in cell membranes; in other words, if you are consuming more omega-6 fats compared to omega-3 fats, your cell membranes will mostly be comprised of pro-inflammatory omega-6s. Find a Healthy Balance The Heart of the Matter Vegetable oils are promoted as “heart healthy,” in part because they were shown in early studies to lower cholesterol, but new analyses of research show a more complex reality. Take for example the Minnesota Coronary Experiment (MCE), conducted from 1968 to 1973. This trial reported that replacing saturated fat with vegetable oil (specifically corn oil) reduced coronary heart disease and death by lowering serum cholesterol. But a fresh analysis of the study, published in 2016, reviewed unpublished data on the 9,423 participants of the MCE and found that while replacing saturated fats with vegetable oils did indeed lower cholesterol levels, there was “no mortality benefit for the intervention group.” And in fact, “There was a 22% higher risk of death for each 30 mg/dL reduction in serum cholesterol…” and “There was no evidence of benefit in the intervention group for coronary atherosclerosis or myocardial infarcts [heart attacks].” In analyses of other studies, “these cholesterol lowering interventions showed no evidence of benefit on mortality from coronary heart disease or all-cause mortality.” The researchers concluded by saying that findings from the Minnesota Coronary Experiment “add to growing evidence that incomplete publication has contributed to overestimation [of benefits], and underestimation of potential risks, of replacing saturated fat with vegetable oils rich in linoleic acid [the main omega-6 found in vegetable oil].”

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