Coconut Oil Benefits: When Fat Is Good For You.
Physician and author
You've no doubt noticed that for about the last 60 years, the majority of health
care officials and the media have been telling you saturated fats are bad for
your health and lead to a host of negative consequences, including high
cholesterol, obesity, heart disease and Alzheimer's disease.
Meanwhile during this same 60 years, the American levels
of heart disease, obesity, elevated serum cholesterol and Alzheimer's have
skyrocketed.
Did you know that multiple studies on Pacific Island
populations who get 30-60 percent of their total caloric intake from fully
saturated coconut oil have all shown nearly non-existent rates of
cardiovascular disease? (1)
The fact is, all saturated fats are not created equal.
The operative word here is "created," because
some saturated fats occur naturally, while other fats are artificially
manipulated into a saturated state through the man-made process called
hydrogenation.
Hydrogenation manipulates vegetable and seed oils by
adding hydrogen atoms while heating the oil, producing a rancid, thickened substance
that really only benefits processed food shelf life and corporate profits -- just about all experts now agree,
hydrogenation does nothing good for your health.
These manipulated saturated fats are also called trans-fats -- and you should avoid them like the plague.
But if one form of saturated fat is bad for you, does that mean all
saturated fat is bad for you?
Absolutely not!
The Tropics' Best Kept Secret
The truth about coconut oil is obvious to anyone who has
studied the health of those who live in native tropical cultures, where coconut
has been a primary dietary staple for thousands of years.
Back in the 1930s, Dr. Weston Price found South Pacific
Islanders whose diets were high in coconut to be healthy and trim, despite high
dietary fat, and heart disease was virtually non-existent. Similarly, in 1981,
researchers studying two Polynesian communities for whom coconut was the
primary caloric energy source found them to have excellent cardiovascular
health and fitness. (2)
Where were all the clogged arteries and heart attacks
from eating all of this "evil" saturated fat?
Obviously, coconut oil was doing nothing to harm the
health of these islanders.
It may be surprising for you to learn that the naturally
occurring saturated fat in coconut oil is actually good for you and provides a
number of profound health benefits, such as:
• Improving your heart health.(3)
• Boosting your thyroid. (4)
• Increasing your metabolism.
• Promoting a lean body and weight loss if needed.
• Supporting your immune system. (5)
• Boosting your thyroid. (4)
• Increasing your metabolism.
• Promoting a lean body and weight loss if needed.
• Supporting your immune system. (5)
Coconut oil even benefits your skin when applied topically and has been found to
have anti-aging, regenerative effects.
So, what are coconut oil's secrets to success?
How Coconut Oil Works Wonders in Your Body
Nearly 50 percent of the fat in coconut oil is of a type
rarely found in nature called lauric acid, a "miracle" compound
because of its unique health promoting properties. Your body converts lauric
acid into monolaurin, which has anti-viral, anti-bacterial and anti-protozoa
properties. (6)
Coconut oil is also nature's richest source of
medium-chain fatty acids (MCFAs), also called medium-chain triglycerides or
MCTs. By contrast, most common vegetable or seed oils are comprised of long
chain fatty acids (LCFAs), also known as long-chain triglycerides or LCTs.
LCTs are large molecules, so they are difficult for your
body to break down and are predominantly stored as fat.
But MCTs (7) , being smaller, are easily digested and
immediately burned by your liver for energy -- like carbohydrates, but without
the insulin spike. MCTs actually boost your metabolism and
help your body use fat for energy, as opposed to storing it, so it can actually
help you become leaner.
Back in the 1940s, farmers discovered this effect
accidentally when they tried using inexpensive coconut oil to fatten their
livestock.
It didn't work!
Instead, coconut oil made the animals lean, active and
hungry.
Coconut oil has actually been shown to help optimize body
weight, which can dramatically reduce your risk of developing Type 2 diabetes (8). Besides weight loss, boosting your
metabolic rate will improve your energy, accelerate healing and improve your
overall immune function.
And several studies have now shown that MCTs can enhance
physical or athletic performance.(9)
And finally, as we have already discussed, coconut oil is
incedibly good for your heart. The truth is this: it is unsaturated fats that are primarily involved in
heart disease and too much sugar and processed foods, not the naturally
occurring saturated fats, as you have been led to believe. (10)
Coconut Oil in Your Kitchen
Personally, I use only two oils in my food preparation.
The first, extra-virgin olive oil is the best
monounsaturated fat and works great as a salad dressing. However, olive oil should not be used for cooking. Due to its
chemical structure, heat makes olive oil susceptible to oxidative damage. So
for cooking, I use coconut oil exclusively.
And polyunsaturated fats, which include common vegetable
oils such as corn, soy, safflower, sunflower and canola, are absolutely the worst oils to cook with.
Why?
Three primary reasons:
1) Cooking your food in omega-6 vegetable oils produces a
variety of very toxic chemicals, as well as forming trans-fats. Frying destroys
the antioxidants in oil, actually oxidizing the oil, which causes even worse
problems for your body than trans-fats.
2) Most vegetable oils are GM (genetically modified), including more than 90 percent
of soy, corn and canola oils.
3) Vegetable oils contribute to the overabundance of
damaged omega-6 fats in your diet, throwing offyour omega-6 to
omega-3 ratio. Nearly everyone in Western society consumes far too many
omega-6 fats -- about 100 times more than a century ago -- and insufficient
omega 3 fats, which contributes to numerous chronic degenerative diseases.
There is only one oil that is stable enough to withstand
the heat of cooking, and that's coconut oil. So, do yourself a favor and ditch
all those "healthy oil wannabes," and replace them with a large jar
of fresh, organic, heart-supporting coconut oil.
Dr. Joseph Mercola is the founder and director of Mercola.com. Become a fan of
Dr. Mercola on Facebook, follow him on Twitter, and check
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(1) Kaunitz H, Dayrit CS. Coconut oil consumption and coronary heart disease. Philippine Journal of Internal Medicine, 1992;30:165-171
(1) Kaunitz H, Dayrit CS. Coconut oil consumption and coronary heart disease. Philippine Journal of Internal Medicine, 1992;30:165-171
(2) Prior IA, Davidson F, Salmond CE, Czochanska Z.
Cholesterol, coconuts, and diet on Polynesian atolls: a natural experiment: The
Pukapuka and Tokelau Island studies, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
1981;34:1552-1561
(3) Raymond Peat Newsletter, Coconut Oil, reprinted at www.heall.com. http://www.heall.com/body/healthupdates/food/coconutoil.html
An Interview With Dr. Raymond Peat, A Renowned Nutritional Counselor Offers His
Thoughts About Thyroid Disease
(4) Baba, N 1982.Enhanced thermogenesis and diminished
deposition of fat in response to overfeeding with diet containing medium-chain
triglycerides, Am. J. Clin. Nutr., 35:379
(5) Dr. Mary G. Enig, Ph.D., F.A.C.N. Source: Coconut: In Support of Good Health in the 21st Century
(6) Isaacs CE, Litov RE, Marie P, Thormar H. Addition of lipases to infant formulas produces antiviral and antibacterial activity, Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 1992;3:304-308.
(6) Isaacs CE, Litov RE, Marie P, Thormar H. Addition of lipases to infant formulas produces antiviral and antibacterial activity, Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 1992;3:304-308.
Isaacs CE, Schneidman K. Enveloped Viruses in Human and
Bovine Milk are Inactivated by Added Fatty Acids(FAs) and Monoglycerides(MGs),
FASEB Journal, 1991;5: Abstract 5325, p.A1288.
Mitsuto Matsumoto, Takeru Kobayashi, Akio Takenakaand
Hisao Itabashi. Defaunation Effects of Medium Chain Fatty Acids and Their
Derivatives on Goat Rumen Protozoa, The Journal of General Applied Microbiology,
Vol. 37, No. 5 (1991) pp.439-445.
(7) St-Onge MP, Jones PJ. Greater rise in fat oxidation
with medium-chain triglyceride consumption relative to long-chain triglyceride
is associated with lower initial body weight and greater loss of subcutaneous adipose
tissue, International Journal of Obesity & Related Metabolic Disorders,
2003 Dec;27(12):1565-71. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12975635
(8) Geliebter, A 1980. Overfeeding with a diet of
medium-chain triglycerides impedes accumulation of body fat, Clinical
Nutrition, 28:595
(9) Fushiki, T and Matsumoto, K Swimming endurance
capacity of mice is increased by consumption of medium-chain triglycerides,
Journal of Nutrition, 1995;125:531. http://www.coconut-connections.com/hypothyroidism.htm
(10) Barry Groves, PhD. Second Opinions: Exposing Dietary Misinformation: The Cholesterol Myth, parts 1 and 2
(10) Barry Groves, PhD. Second Opinions: Exposing Dietary Misinformation: The Cholesterol Myth, parts 1 and 2
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