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- <html>
- <head><title>Oils in Context</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Oils in Context
- </h1>
-
- <p>
- An oil researcher<sup>[0]</sup>
-
- spent 100 days eating what he considered to be the "Eskimo diet," seal blubber and mackerel paste. He
- observed that his blood lipid peroxides (measured as malondialdehyde, MDA) reached a level 50 times higher
- than normal, and although MDA is teratogenic, he said he wasn't worried about fathering deformed children,
- because his sperm count had gone to zero. Evidently, he didn't have a very thorough understanding of the
- Eskimo way of life. In most traditional cultures, the whole animal is used for food, including the brain and
- the endocrine glands. Since unsaturated fats inhibit thyroid function, and since Eskimos usually have a high
- caloric intake but are not typically obese, it seems that` their metabolic rate is being promoted by
- something in their diet, which might also be responsible for protecting them from the effects experienced by
- the oil researcher. (According to G. W. Crile, the basal metabolic rate of Eskimos was 125% of that of
- people in the United States.)
- </p>
- <p>
- People who eat fish heads (or other animal heads) generally consume the thyroid gland, as well as the brain.
- The brain is the body's richest source of cholesterol, which, with adequate thyroid hormone and vitamin A,
- is converted into the steroid hormones pregnenolone, progesterone, and DHEA, in proportion to the quantity
- circulating in blood in low-density lipoproteins. The brain is also the richest source of these very
- water-insoluble (hydrophobic) steroid hormones; it has a concentration about 20 times higher than the serum,
- for example. The active thyroid hormone is also concentrated many-fold in the brain.
- </p>
- <p>
- DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) is known to be low in people who are susceptible to heart disease <sup
- >[1]</sup> or cancer, and all three of these steroids have a broad spectrum of protective actions. Thyroid
- hormone, vitamin A, and cholesterol, which are used to produce the protective steroids, have been found to
- have a similarly broad range of protective effects, even when used singly. For example, according to
- MacCallum,
- </p>
- <p>
- It has been shown that certain lipoid substances, especially cholesterine, can act as inhibiting or
- neutralizing agents toward such haemolytic poisons as saponin, cobra poison, etc., through forming with them
- an innocuous compound. Hanes showed that the relative immunity of puppies from chloroform poisoning is due
- to the large amount of cholesterin esters in their tissues. When artificially introduced into the tissues of
- adult animals a similar protection is conferred.<sup>[2]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- A high level of serum cholesterol is practically diagnostic of hypothyroidism, and can be seen as an
- adaptive attempt to maintain adequate production of the protective steroids. Broda Barnes' work clearly
- showed that hypothyroid populations are susceptible to infections, heart disease, and cancer. <sup>[3]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- In the 1940s, some of the toxic effects of fish oil (such as testicular degeneration, softening of the
- brain, muscle damage, and spontaneous cancer) were found to result from an induced vitamin E deficiency.
- Unfortunately, there isn't much reason to think that just supplementing vitamin E will provide general
- protection against the unsaturated fats. The half-life of fats in human adipose tissue is about 600 days,
- meaning that significant amounts of previously consumed oils will still be present up to four years after
- they have been removed from the diet. <sup>[4]</sup>
- According to Draper, et al., <sup>[5]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>, , , </strong>
- enrichment of the tissues with highly unsaturated fatty acids results in an increase in lipid peroxidation
- in vivo even in the presence of normal concentrations of vitamin E. Fasting for more than 24 hours also
- results in an increase in MDA excretion, implying that lipolysis is associated with peroxidation of the
- fatty acids released.
- </p>
-
- <h2 align="justify">
- According to Lemeshko, et al., it seems that this effect increases with the age of the animal. <sup>[6]</sup
- >
- </h2>
- <p>
- Commercial advertising (including medical conferences sponsored by pharmaceutical companies) and
- commercially sponsored research are creating some false impressions about the role of unsaturated oils in
- the diet. Like the man who poisoned himself with the "Eskimo diet," many people focus so intently on
- avoiding one problem that they create other problems. Since I have discussed the association of unsaturated
- fats with aging, lipofuscin, and estrogen elsewhere, I will outline some of the other problems associated
- with the oils, especially as they relate to hormones.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Mechanisms and Essentiality:
- </strong> When something is unavoidable, in ordinary life, talking about "essentiality," or the minimum
- amount required for life or for optimal health, is more important as an exploration into the nature of our
- life than as a practical health issue. For example, how much oxygen, how many germs (of what kinds), how
- many cosmic rays (of what kinds), would produce the nicest human beings? The fact that we have adapted to
- something---oxygen at sea level, microbes, or vegetable fats, for example--doesn't mean that we are normally
- exposed to it in ideal amounts.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Animals contain desaturase enzymes, and are able to produce specific unsaturated fats (from oleic and
- palmitoleic acids) when deprived of the ordinary "essential fatty acids," <sup>[7]</sup> so it can be
- assumed that these enzymes have a vital purpose. The high concentration of unsaturated fats in
- mitochondria--the respiratory organelles where it seems that these lipids present a special danger of
- destructive oxidation--suggests that they are required for mitochondrial structure, or function, or
- regulation, or reproduction. Unsaturated fats have special properties of adsorption, <sup>[8]</sup> and are
- more soluble in water than are saturated fats. The movement and modulation of proteins and nucleic acids
- might require these special properties. As the main site of ATP production, I suspect that their
- water-retaining property might be crucial. When a protein solution (even egg-white) is poured into a high
- concentration of ATP, it contracts or "superprecipitates." This condensing, water-expelling property of ATP
- in protein solutions is similar to the effect of certain concentrations of salts on any polymer. It would
- seem appropriate to have a substance to oppose this condensing effect, to stimulate swelling <sup>[9,
- 10]</sup> and the uptake of precursor substances. Something that has an intrinsic structure-loosening or
- water-retaining effect would be needed. The ideas of "chaotropic agents" and "structural antioxidants" have
- been proposed by Vladimirov <sup>[11]</sup> to bring generality into our understanding of the mitochondria.
- Lipid peroxides are among the chaotropic agents, and thyroxin is among the structural antioxidants. The
- known oxygen-sparing effects of progesterone <sup>[12, 13]</sup> would make it appropriate to include it
- among the structural antioxidants. The incorporation of the wrong unsaturated fats into mitochondria would
- be expected to damage the vital respiratory functions.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Some insects that have been studied have been found not to require the essential fatty acids. <sup>[14]</sup
- >* According to reviewers, hogs and humans have not been shown to require the "essential" fatty acids. <sup
- >[15]</sup> In vitro studies indicate that they are not required for human diploid cells to continue
- dividing in culture. <sup>
- [16]
- </sup> According to Guarnieri, <sup>[17]</sup> EFA-deficient animals don't die from their deficiency. The
- early studies showing "essentiality" of unsaturated fats, by producing skin problems and an increased
- metabolic rate, have been criticized <sup>[18]</sup> in the light of better nutritional information, e.g.,
- pointing out that the diets might have been deficient in vitamin B6 and/or biotin. The similar skin
- condition produced by vitamin B6 deficiency was found to be improved by adding unsaturated fats to the diet.
- A fat-free liver extract cured the "EFA deficiency." I think it would be reasonable to investigate the
- question of the increased metabolic rate produced by a diet lacking unsaturated fats (which inhibit both
- thyroid function and protein metabolism) in relation to the biological changes that have been observed.
- Since diets rich in protein are known to increase the requirement for vitamin B6 <sup>[19]</sup> (which is a
- co-factor of transaminases, for example), the increased rate of energy production and improved digestibility
- of dietary protein on a diet lacking unsaturated fats would certainly make it reasonable to provide the
- experimental animals with increased amount of other nutrients. With increasing knowledge, the old
- experiments indicating the "essentiality" of certain oils have lost their ability to convince, and they
- haven't been replaced by new and meaningful demonstrations. In the present state of knowledge, I don't think
- it would be unreasonable to suggest that the optional dietary level of the "essential fatty acids" might be
- close to zero, if other dietary factors were also optimized. The practical question, though, has to do with
- the dietary choices that can be made at the present time.
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- *If we followed Linus Pauling's reasoning in determining optimal vitamin C intake, this study of the
- linoleic acid content of the tissues of an animal which can synthesize it would suggest that we are eating
- about 100 times more "EFA" than we should.
- </p>
- <p>
- In evaluating dietary fat, it is too often forgotten that the animals' diet (and other factors, including
- temperature) affect the degree of saturation of fats in its tissues, or its milk, or eggs. The fat of wild
- rabbits or summer-grazing horses, for example, can contain 40% linolenic acid, about the same as linseed
- oil. Hogs fed soybeans can have fat containing over 30% linoleic acid. <sup>[20]</sup>
- Considering that most of our food animals are fed large amounts of grains and soybeans, it isn't accurate to
- speak of their fats as "animal fats." And, considering the vegetable oil contained in our milk, eggs, and
- meat, it would seem logical to select other foods that are not rich in unsaturated oils.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Temperature and Fat:</strong> The fact that saturated fats are dominant in tropical plants and in
- warm-blooded animals relates to the stability of these oils at high temperatures. Coconut oil which had been
- stored at room temperature for a year was found to have no measurable rancidity. Since growing coconuts
- often experience temperatures around 100 degrees Fahrenheit, ordinary room temperature isn't an oxidative
- challenge. Fish oil or safflower oil, though, can't be stored long at room temperature, and at 98 degrees F,
- the spontaneous oxidation is very fast.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Bacteria vary the kind of fat they synthesize, according to temperature, forming more saturated fats at
- higher temperatures.<sup>[21]</sup> The same thing has been observed in seed oil plants. <sup>[22]</sup>
- Although sheep have highly saturated fat, the superficial fat near their skin is relatively unsaturated; it
- would obviously be inconvenient for the sheep if their surface fat hardened in cool weather, when their skin
- temperature drops considerably. Pigs wearing sweaters were found to have more saturated fat than other
- pigs.<sup>[23]</sup>
- Fish, which often live in water which is only a few degrees above freezing, couldn't function with hardened
- fat. At temperatures which are normal for fish, and for seeds which germinate in the cold northern
- springtime, rancidity of fats isn't a problem, but rigidity would be.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Unsaturated Fats Are Essentially Involved In Heart Damage:
- </strong>
- The toxicity of unsaturated oils for the heart is well established, <sup>
- [24, 25, 26]</sup> though not well known by the public.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In 1962, it was found that unsaturated fatty acids are directly toxic to mitochondria. <sup>[27]</sup> Since
- stress increases the amount of free fatty acids circulating in the blood (as well as lipid peroxides), and
- since lack of oxygen increases the intracellular concentration of free fatty acids, stored unsaturated fats
- would seem to represent a special danger to the stressed organism. Meerson and his colleagues <sup>
- [18]</sup> have demonstrated that stress liberates even local tissue fats in the heart during stress,
- and that systematic drug treatment, including antioxidants, can stop the enlargement of stress-induced
- infarctions. Recently, it was found that the cardiac necrosis caused by unsaturated fats (linolenic acid, in
- particular) could be prevented by a cocoa butter supplement. <sup>[29]</sup> The author suggests that this
- is evidence for the "essentiality" of saturated fats, but points out that animals normally can produce
- enough saturated fat from dietary carbohydrate or protein, to prevent cardiac necrosis, unless the diet
- provides too much unsaturated fat. A certain proportion of saturated fat appears to be necessary for
- stability of the mitochondria. Several other recent studies show that the "essential" fatty acids decrease
- the P/O ratio, or the phosphorylation efficiency, <sup>[30]</sup> the amount of usable energy produced by
- cellular respiration.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- There has been some publicity about a certain unsaturated fat, eicosapentaenoic acid, or EPA, which can have
- some apparently protective and anti-inflammatory effects. A study in which butter was added to the animals'
- diet found that serum EPA was elevated by the butter. The investigator pointed out that other studies had
- been able to show increased serum EPA from an EPA supplement only when the animals had previously been fed
- butter.<sup> [31]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- Intense lobbying by the soybean oil industry has created the widespread belief that "tropical oils" cause
- heart disease. In a comparison of many kinds of oil, including linseed oil, olive oil, whale oil, etc., palm
- oil appeared to be the most protective. The same researcher <sup>
- [32]</sup> more recently studied palm oil's antithrombotic effect, in relation to platelet aggregation.
- It was found that platelet aggregation was enhanced by sunflowerseed oil, but that palm oil tended to
- decrease it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Much current research has concentrated on the factors involved in arterial clotting. Since the blood moves
- quickly through the arteries, rapid processes are of most interest to those workers, though some people do
- remember to think in terms of an equilibrium between formation and removal of clot material. For about 25
- years there was interest in the ability of vitamin E to facilitate clot removal, apparently by activating
- proteolytic enzymes.<sup>[33]</sup> Unsaturated fats' ability to inhibit proteolytic enzymes in the blood
- has occasionally been discussed, but seldom in the U.S. The equilibrium between clotting and clot
- dissolution is especially important in the veins, where blood moves more slowly, and spends more time.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>. . . </strong>
- the slower blood flows the greater its predisposition to clotting. However, this intrinsic process, leading
- to fibrin production, is slow, taking up to a minute or more to occur. Thrombosis as a result of stasis,
- therefore, occurs in the venous circulation; typically in the legs where"venous return is slowest. In fact,
- many thousands of small thrombi are formed each day in the lower body. These pass via the vena cava into the
- lungs where thrombolysis occurs, this being a normal metabolic function of the organ. <sup>[34]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Shutes' research in the 1930s and 1040s, vitamin E and estrogen acted in opposite directions on the
- clot-removing enzymes.<sup>[33]</sup>
- Since estrogen increases blood lipids, and increases the incidence of strokes and heart attacks, it would be
- interesting to expand the Shutes' work by considering the degree of saturation of blood lipids in relation
- to the effects of vitamin E and estrogen on clot removal. Estrogen's effect on clotting is very complex,
- since it increases the ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids in the body, and increases the tendency
- of blood to pool in the large veins, in addition to its direct effects on the clotting factors.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Immunodeficiency and Unsaturated Fats:
- </strong>Intravenous feeding with unsaturated fats is powerfully immunosuppressive <sup>[35]</sup> (though
- it often was used to give more calories to cancer patients) and is now advocated as a way to prevent graft
- rejection. The deadly effect of the long-chain unsaturated fats on the immune system has led to the
- development of new products containing short and medium-chain saturated fats for intravenous feeding. <sup
- >[36]</sup> It was recently reported that the anti-inflammatory effect of n-3 fatty acids (fish oil) might
- be related to the observed suppression of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor by those fats. <sup
- >[37]</sup> The suppression of these anti-tumor immune factors persists after the fish oil treatment is
- stopped.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- As mentioned above, stress and hypoxia can cause cells to take up large amounts of fatty acids. Cortisol's
- ability to kill white blood cells (which can be inhibited by extra glucose) is undoubtedly an important part
- of its immunosuppressive effect, and this killing is mediated by causing the cells to take up unsaturated
- fats. <sup>[38]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- Several aspects of the immune system are improved by short-chain saturated fats. Their anti-histamine action
- <sup>[39]</sup> is probably important, because of histamine's immunosuppressive effects.<sup>[40]</sup>
- Unsaturated fats have been found to cause degranulation of mast cells.<sup>[41]</sup>
- The short-chain fatty acids normally produced by bacteria in the bowel apparently have a local
- anti-inflammatory action.<sup>[42]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- A recent discussion of "tissue destruction by neutrophils" mentions "a fascinating series of experiments
- performed between 1888 and 1906," in which "German and American scientists established the importance of
- neutrophil proteinases and plasma antiproteinases in the evolution of tissue damage in vivo." <sup>[43]</sup
- >
- MacCallum's <em>Pathology </em>described some related work:
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>. . . </strong>
- Jobling has shown that the decomposition products of some fats--unsaturated fatty acids and their
- soaps--have the most decisive inhibiting action upon proteolytic ferments, their power being in a sense
- proportional to the degree of unsaturation of the fatty acid. So universally is it true that such
- unsaturated fatty acids can impede the action of proteolytic ferments that many pathological conditions
- (such as the persistence of caseous tuberculous material in its solid form) can be shown to be due to their
- presence. If they are rendered impotent by saturation of their unsaturated group with iodine, the
- proteolysis goes on rapidly and the caseous tubercle or gumma rapidly softens.<sup>[44]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- Another comment by MacCallum suggests one way in which unsaturated fats could block the action of cytotoxic
- cells:
- </p>
- <p>
- This function of the wandering cells is, of course, of immediate importance in connection with their task of
- cleaning up the injured area to prepare it for repair. While the proteases thus produced are active in the
- solution of undesirable material, their unbridled action might be detrimental. As a matter of fact, it is
- shown by Jobling and Petersen that the anti-ferment known to be present in the serum and to restrict the
- action of the ferment is a recognizable chemical substance, usually a soap or other combination of an
- unsaturated fatty acid. It is possible to remove or decompose this substance or to saturate the fatty acid
- with iodine and thus release the ferment to its full activity. <sup>[45]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Unsaturated Fats Are Essential For Cancer:
- </strong>
- The inhibition of proteolytic enzymes by unsaturated fats will act at many sites: digestion of protein,
- "digestion" of clots, "digestion" of the colloid in the thyroid gland which releases the hormones, the
- activity of white cells mentioned above, and the normal "digestion" of cytoplasmic proteins involved in
- maintaining a steady state as new proteins are formed and added to the cytoplasm. It has been suggested that
- inhibition of the destruction of intracellular proteins would shift the balance toward growth.<sup>[46]</sup
- >
- Cancer cells are known to have a high level of unsaturated fats,<sup>[47]</sup>
-
- yet they have a low level of lipid peroxidation;<sup>[48]</sup> lipid peroxidation inhibits growth, and is
- often mentioned as a normal growth restraining factor.<sup>[49]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- In 1927, it was observed that a diet lacking fats prevented the development of spontaneous tumors.[50] Many
- subsequent investigators have observed that the unsaturated fats are essential for the development of
- tumors. <sup>[51, 52, 53]</sup> Tumors secrete a factor which mobilizes fats from storage, <sup>[54]</sup>
- presumably guaranteeing their supply in abundance until the adipose tissues are depleted. Saturated
- fats--coconut oil and butter, for example--do not promote tumor growth.<sup>[55]</sup> Olive oil is not a
- strong tumor promoter, but in some experiments it does have a slightly permissive effect on tumor growth.
- <sup>[56, 57]</sup> In some experiments, the carcinogenic action of unsaturated fats could be offset by
- added thyroid, <sup>[57]</sup>
-
- an observation which might suggest that at least part of the effect of the oil is to inhibit thyroid. Adding
- cystine to the diet (cysteine, the reduced form of cystine, is a thyroid antagonist) also increases the
- tumor incidence.<sup>[58]</sup> In a hyperthyroid state, the ability to quickly oxidize larger amounts of
- the toxic oils would very likely have a protective effect, preventing storage and subsequent peroxidation,
- and reducing the oils' ability to synergize with estrogen.
- </p>
- <p>
- Consumption of unsaturated fat has been associated with both skin aging and with the sensitivity of the skin
- to ultraviolet damage, Ultraviolet light-induced skin cancer seems to be mediated by unsaturated fats and
- lipid peroxidation.<sup>[59]</sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- In a detailed study of the carcinogenicity of different quantities of unsaturated fat, Ip, et al., tested
- levels ranging from 0.5% to 10%, and found that the cancer incidence varied with the amount of "essential
- oils" in the diet. Some of their graphs make the point very clearly:<sup>
- [52}</sup>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- This suggests that the optimal EFA intake might be 0.5% or less.
- </p>
- <p>
- Butter and coconut oil contain significant amounts of the short and medium-chain saturated fatty acids,
- which are very easily metabolized,<sup>[60]</sup>
- inhibit the release of histamine,<sup>[39]</sup> promote differentiation of cancer cells,<sup>[61]</sup>
- tend to counteract the stress-induced proteins,<sup>[62]</sup> decrease the expression of prolactin
- receptors, and promote the expression of the T3 (thyroid) receptor. <sup>[63] </sup>
-
- (A defect of the thyroid receptor molecule has been identified as an "oncogene," responsible for some
- cancers, as has a defect in the progesterone receptor.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides inhibiting the thyroid gland, the unsaturated fats impair intercellular communication,[64] suppress
- several immune functions that relate to cancer, and are present at high concentrations in cancer cells,
- where their antiproteolytic action would be expected to interfere with the proteolytic enzymes and to shift
- the equilibrium toward growth. In the free fatty acid form, the unsaturated fats are toxic to the
- mitochondria, but cancer cells are famous for their compensatory glycolysis.
- </p>
- <p>
- By using lethargic connective tissue cells known to have a very low propensity to take up unsaturated fats
- <sup>[65]</sup> as controls in comparison with, e.g., breast cancer cells, with a high affinity for fats, it
- is possible to show a "selective" toxicity of oils for cancer cells. However, an in vivo test of an
- alph-linolenic acid ester showed it to have a stimulating effect on breast cancer.<sup>[66]</sup>
- Given a choice, skin fibroblasts demonstrate a very specific preference for oleic acid, over a
- polyunsaturated fat.<sup>[67]</sup>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Even if unsaturated fats were (contrary to the best evidence) selectively toxic for cancer cells, their use
- in cancer chemotherapy would have to deal with the issues of their tendency to cause pulmonary
- embolism,their suppression of immunity including factors specifically involved in cancer resistance, and
- their carcinogenicity.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Brain Damage And Lipid Peroxidation:
- </strong>
- When pregnant mice were fed either coconut oil or unsaturated seed oil, the mice that got coconut oil had
- babies with normal brains and intelligence, but the mice exposed to the unsaturated oil had smaller brains,
- and had inferior intelligence. In another experiment, radioactively labeled soy oil was given to nursing
- rats, and it was shown to be massively incorporated into brain cells, and to cause visible structural
- changes in the cells. In 1980, shortly after this study was published in Europe, the U.S. Department of
- Agriculture issued a recommendation against the use of soy oil in infant formulas. More recently, <sup
- >[68]</sup> pregnant rats and their offspring were given soy lecithin with their food, and the exposed
- offspring developed sensorimotor defects.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many other studies have demonstrated that excessive unsaturated dietary fats interfere with learning and
- behavior, <sup>[70, 71]</sup> and the fact that some of the effects can be reduced with antioxidants
- suggests that lipid peroxidation causes some of the damage. Other studies are investigating the involvement
- of lipid peroxidation in seizures.<sup>[72]</sup>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The past use of soy oil in artificial milk (and in maternal diets) has probably caused some brain damage.
- The high incidence of neurological defects (e.g., 90%) that has been found among violent criminals suggests
- that it might be worthwhile to look for unusual patterns of brain lipids in violent people.
- </p>
- <p>
- There have been a series of claims that babies' brains or eyes develop better when their diets are
- supplemented with certain unsaturated oils, based on the idea that diets may be deficient in certain types
- of oil, Some experimenters claim that the supplements have improved the mental development of babies, but
- other researchers find that the supplemented babies have poorer mental development. But the oils that are
- added to the babies' diets are derived from fish or algae, and contain a great variety of substances (such
- as vitamins) other than the unsaturated fatty acids, and the researchers consistently fail to control for
- the effects of such substances.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has shown that it is probably impossible to experience a detectable deficiency of linoleic acid outside
- of the laboratory setting,<sup>[69]</sup> but the real issue is probably whether the amount in the normal
- diet is harmful to development. Until the research with animals has produced a better understanding of the
- effects of unsaturated oils, experimenting on human babies seems hard to justify.
- </p>
- <p>
- Marion Diamond, who has studied the improved brain growth in rats given a stimulating environment (which,
- like prenatal progesterone, produced improved intelligence and larger brains), observed that in old age the
- "enriched" rats' brains contained less lipofuscin (age pigment).<sup>[73]</sup>
- It is generally agreed that the unsaturated oils promote the formation of age pigment. The discovery that
- stress or additional cortisone (which, by blocking the use of glucose, forces cells to take up more fat)
- causes accelerated aging of the brain<sup>[74]</sup> should provide new motivation to investigate the
- antistress properties of substances such as the protective steroids mentioned above, and the short-chain
- saturated fats.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <strong>Essential for Liver Damage:</strong> Both experimental and epidemiological studies have shown that
- dietary linoleic acid is required for the development of alcoholic liver damage.<sup>[75] </sup>
- Animals fed tallow and ethanol had no liver injury, but even 0.7% or 2.5% linoleic acid with ethanol caused
- fatty liver, necrosis, and inflammation. Dietary cholesterol at a level of 2% was found to cause no
- harm,<sup>[76]</sup>
- but omitting it entirely from the diet caused leakage of amino-transferase enzymes. This effect of the
- absence of cholesterol was very similar to the effects of the presence of linoleic acid with ethanol.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Obesity: </strong>
- For many years studies have been demonstrating that dietary coconut oil causes decreased fat synthesis and
- storage, when compared with diets containing unsaturated fats. More recently, this effect has been discussed
- as a possible treatment for obesity.<sup>[77]</sup>
- The short-chain fats in coconut oil probably improve tissue response to the thyroid hormone (T3), and its
- low content of unsaturated fats might allow a more nearly optimal function of the thyroid gland and of
- mitochondria. A survey of other tropical fruits' content of short and medium chain fatty acids might be
- useful, to find lower calorie foods which contain significant amounts of the shorter-chain fats.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- <strong>Other Problem Areas:
- </strong> The presence of palmitate in the lung surfactant phospholipids<sup>[78]</sup> suggests that
- maternal overload with unsaturated fats might interfere with the formation of these important substances,
- causing breathing problems in the newborn. The bone-calcium mobilizing effect of prostaglandins suggests
- that dietary fats might affect osteoporosis; the absence of osteoporosis in some tropical populations might
- relate to their consumption of coconut oil and other saturated tropical oils. The steroids which occur in
- association with some seed oils might be nutritionally significant, in the way animal hormones in foods
- undoubtedly are. For example, soy steroids can be converted by bowel bacteria into estrogens. R. Marker, et
- al., found diosgenin (the material in the Mexican yam from which progesterone, etc., are derived) in a palm
- kernel, <em>Balanites aegyptica (Wall)</em>.<sup>[79]</sup>
- Another palm fruit also contains sterols with anti-androgenic and anti-edematous actions.<sup>[80, 81]
- </sup>
- </p>
- <p>
- If the amount of ingested unsaturated fats (inhibitors of protein digestion) were lower, protein
- requirements might be lower.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The similar effects of estrogen and of polyunsaturated fats (PUFA) are numerous. They include antagonism to
- vitamin E and thyroid, to respiration and proteolysis; promotion of lipofuscin formation and of clot
- formation, promotion of seizure activity, impairment of brain development and learning; and involvement in
- positive or negative regulation of cell division, depending on cell type.
- </p>
- <p>
- These parallels suggest that the role of PUFA in reproduction might be similar to that of estrogen, namely,
- the promotion of uterine and breast cell proliferation, water uptake, etc. Such parallels should be a
- caution in generalizing from the conditions which are essential for reproduction to the conditions which are
- compatible with full development and full functional capacity. If a certain small amount of dietary PUFA is
- essential for reproduction, but for no other life function, then it is analogous to the brief "estrogen
- surge," which must quickly be balanced by opposing hormones. The present approach to contraception through
- estrogen-induced miscarriage might give way to fertility regulation by diet. A self-actualizing
- pro-longevity diet, low in PUFA, might prolong our characteristically human condition of delayed
- reproductive maturity, and, if PUFA are really essential for reproduction, unsaturated vegetable oils could
- temporarily be added to the diet when reproduction is desired.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>Conclusions:</strong>
- Polyunsaturated fats are nearly ubiquitous, but if they are "essential nutrients," in the way vitamin A, or
- lysine, is essential, that has not been demonstrated. It seems clear that they <em>are </em>
-
- essential for cancer, and that they have other properties which cause them to be toxic at certain levels. It
- might be time to direct research toward determining whether there is a threshold of toxicity, or whether
- they are, like ionizing radiation, toxic at any level.
- </p>
-
- <p><strong>Note:</strong></p>
- <p>
- <strong>A possible mitochondrial site for toxicity:
- </strong>
- In 1971 I was trying to combine some of the ideas of Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, Otto Warburg, W. F. Koch, and L.
- C. Strong. I was interested in the role of ubiquinone in mitochondrial respiration. In one experiment, I was
- using paper chromatography to compare oils that I had extracted from liver with vitamin E and with
- commercially purified ubiquinone. Besides using the pure substances, I decided to combine vitamin E with
- ubiquinone for another test spot. As soon as I combined the two oils, their amber and orange colors turned
- to an inky, greenish black color. I tested both bacterial and mammalian ubiquinone, and benzoquinone, and
- they all produced similar colors with vitamin E. When I ran the solvent up the paper, the vitamin E and the
- ubiquinone traveled at slightly different speeds. The black spot, containing the mixture, also moved, but
- each substance moved at its own speed, and as the materials separated, their original lighter colors
- reappeared. Charge-transfer bonds, which characteristically produce dark colors, are very weak bonds. I
- think this must have been that kind of bond. Years later, I tried to repeat the experiment, using
- "ubiquinone" from various capsules that were sold for medical use. Instead of the waxy yellow-orange
- material I had used before, these capsules contained a liquid oil with a somewhat yellow color. Very likely,
- the ubiquinone was dissolved in vegetable oil. At the time, I was puzzled that the color reaction didn't
- occur, but later I realized that a solvent containing double bonds (e.g., soy oil or other oil containing
- PUFA) would very likely prevent the close association between vitamin E and ubiquinone which is necessary
- for charge-transfer to occur. Since I think Koch and Szent-Gyorgyi were right in believing that electronic
- activation is the most important feature of the living state, I think the very specific electronic
- interaction between vitamin E and ubiquinone must play an important role in the respiratory function of
- ubiquinone. Ubiquinone is known to be a part of the electron transport chain which can leak electrons, so
- this might be one of the ways in which vitamin E can prevent the formation of toxic free-radicals. If it can
- prevent the "leakage" of electrons, then this in itself would improve respiratory efficiency. If unsaturated
- oils interfere with this very specific but delicate bond, then this could explain, at least partly, their
- toxicity for mitochondria. ["Electron leak" reference: B. Halliwell, in <em>Age Pigments</em> (R. S. Sohal,
- ed.), pp. 1-62, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1981.]
- </p>
- <hr />
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- </ol>
-
- <p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p>
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