Articles
The Truth About Fats
part 4/
Articles
| by Mary Enig, PhD, and Sally Fallon |
|
Part 4
Benefits of animal fats
Foods containing trans fat sell because the American public is afraid
of the alternative—saturated fats found in tallow, lard, butter,
palm and coconut oil, fats traditionally used for frying and baking.
Yet the scientific literature delineates a number of vital roles for
dietary saturated fats—they enhance the immune system,54 are
necessary for healthy bones,55 provide energy and structural integrity
to the cells,56 protect the liver57 and enhance the body’s use
of essential fatty acids.58 Stearic acid, found in beef tallow and
butter, has cholesterol lowering properties and is a preferred food
for the heart.59 As saturated fats are stable, they do not become
rancid easily, do not call upon the body’s reserves of antioxidants,
do not initiate cancer, do not irritate the artery walls.
Your body makes saturated fats, and your body makes cholesterol—about
2000 mg per day. In general, cholesterol that the average American
absorbs from food amounts to about 100 mg per day. So, in theory,
even reducing animal foods to zero will result in a mere 5% decrease
in the total amount of cholesterol available to the blood and tissues.
In practice, such a diet is likely to deprive the body of the substrates
it needs to manufacture enough of this vital substance; for cholesterol,
like saturated fats, stands unfairly accused. It acts as a precursor
to vital corticosteroids, hormones that help us deal with stress and
protect the body against heart disease and cancer; and to the sex
hormones like androgen, testosterone, estrogen and progesterone; it
is a precursor to vitamin D, a vital fat-soluble vitamin needed for
healthy bones and nervous system, proper growth, mineral metabolism,
muscle tone, insulin production, reproduction and immune system function;
it is the precursor to bile salts, which are vital for digestion and
assimilation of fats in the diet. Recent research shows that cholesterol
acts as an antioxidant.60 This is the likely explanation for the fact
that cholesterol levels go up with age. As an antioxidant, cholesterol
protects us against free radical damage that leads to heart disease
and cancer. Cholesterol is the body’s repair substance, manufactured
in large amounts when the arteries are irritated or weak. Blaming
heart disease on high serum cholesterol levels is like blaming firemen
who have come to put out a fire for starting the blaze.
Cholesterol is needed for proper function of serotonin receptors
in the brain.61 Serotonin is the body's natural "feel-good"
chemical. This explains why low cholesterol levels have been linked
to aggressive and violent behavior, depression and suicidal tendencies.
Mother’s milk is especially rich in cholesterol and contains
a special enzyme that helps the baby utilize this nutrient. Babies
and children need cholesterol-rich foods throughout their growing
years to ensure proper development of the brain and nervous system.
Dietary cholesterol plays an important role in maintaining the health
of the intestinal wall,62 which is why low-cholesterol vegetarian
diets can lead to leaky gut syndrome and other intestinal disorders.
Animal foods containing saturated fat and cholesterol provide vital
nutrients necessary for growth, energy and protection from degenerative
disease. Like sex, animal fats are necessary for reproduction. Humans
are drawn to both by powerful instincts. Suppression of natural appetites
leads to weird nocturnal habits, fantasies, fetishes, bingeing and
splurging.
Animal fats are nutritious, satisfying and they taste good. “Whatever
is the cause of heart disease,” said the eminent biochemist
Michael Gurr in a recent article, “it is not primarily the consumption
of saturated fats.”63 And yet the high priests of the lipid
hypothesis continue to lay their curse on the fairest of culinary
pleasures—butter and Bernaise, whipped cream, souffles and omelets,
full-bodied cheeses, juicy steaks and pork sausage.
Coming full circle—And yet, learning nothing
On April 30, 1996 a senior researcher named David Kritchevsky received
the American Oil Chemists’ Society’s Research Award in
recognition of his accomplishments as a “researcher on cancer
and atherosclerosis as well as cholesterol metabolism.” His
accomplishments include co-authorship of more than 370 research papers,
one of which appeared a month later in the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition.64 “Position paper on trans fatty acids” continued
the debate on trans fats that began in the same journal with Hunter
and Applewhite’s 1986 attack on Enig’s research. “A
controversy has arisen about the potential health hazards of trans
unsaturated fatty acids in the American diet,” wrote Kritchevsky
and his coauthors.
Actually the controversy dates back to 1954. In the rabbit studies
that launched Kritchevsky on his career, the researcher actually found
that cholesterol fed with Wesson oil “markedly accelerated”
the development of cholesterol-containing low-density lipoproteins;
and cholesterol fed with shortening gave cholesterol levels twice
as high as cholesterol fed alone.65 Enig’s work—and that
of Kummerow and Mann and several others—merely confirmed what
Kritchevsky ascertained decades ago but declined to publicize, that
vegetable oils, and particularly partially hydrogenated vegetable
oils, are bad news.
But the “Position paper on trans fatty acids” took no
position at all. Studies have given contradictory results, said the
authors, and the amount of trans in the average American diet is very
difficult to determine. As for labeling, “There is no clear
choice of how to include trans fatty acids on the nutrition label.
The database is insufficient to establish a classification scheme
for these fats.” There may be problems with trans, says the
senior researcher, but their use “helps to reduce the intake
of dietary fats higher in saturated fatty acids. Also, vegetable fats
are not a source of dietary cholesterol, unlike saturated animal fats.”
Kritchevsky and his coauthors conclude that physicians and nutritionists
should “focus on a further decrease in total fat intake and
especially the intake of saturated fat. . . A reduction in total fat
intake simplifies the problem, because all fats in the diet decrease
and choices are unnecessary.” However, even senior scientists
find that fence straddling is necessary. “We may conclude,”
wrote Kritchevsky and his colleagues, “that consumption of liquid
vegetable oils is preferable to solid fats.”
Footnote:
Early this year, 1998, a symposium entitled “Evolution of Ideas
about the Nutritional Value of Dietary Fat” reviewed the many
flaws in the lipid hypothesis and highlighted a study in which mice
fed purified diets died within 20 days but whole milk kept the mice
alive for several months.66 One of the participants was David Kritchevsky
who noted that the use of low-fat diets and drugs in intervention
trials, “did not affect overall CHD mortality.” Ever with
a finger in the wind, this influential Founding Father of the lipid
hypothesis concluded thus: “Research continues apace and, as
new findings appear, it may be necessary to reevaluate our conclusions
and preventive medicine policies.”
© 1999 Mary G. Enig, PhD and Sally Fallon.
First published in Nexus Magazine,
Dec '98-Jan '99 and Feb '99-Mar '99.
Mary G. Enig, Ph.D. is an expert of international renown in the field
of lipid biochemistry. She has headed a number of studies on the content
and effects of trans fatty acids in America and Israel, and has successfully
challenged government assertions that dietary animal fat causes cancer
and heart disease. Recent scientific and media attention on the possible
adverse health effects of trans fatty acids has brought increased
attention to her work. She is a licensed nutritionist, certified by
the Certification Board for Nutrition Specialists, a qualified expert
witness, nutrition consultant to individuals, industry and state and
federal governments, contributing editor to a number of scientific
publications, Fellow of the American College of Nutrition and President
of the Maryland Nutritionists Association. She is the author of over
60 technical papers and presentations, as well as a popular lecturer.
Dr. Enig is currently working on the exploratory development of an
adjunct therapy for AIDS using complete medium chain saturated fatty
acids from whole foods. She is the mother of three healthy children
brought up on whole foods including butter, cream, eggs and meat.
Sally Fallon is the author of Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook
that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats
(with Mary G. Enig, PhD), as well as of numerous articles on the subject
of diet and health. She is President of the Weston A Price Foundation
and founder of A Campaign for Real Milk. She is the mother of four
healthy children raised on whole foods including butter, cream, eggs
and meat.
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References