A Consumer's Guide
to Fats
Once upon a time, we
didn't know anything about fat except that it made foods tastier. We
cooked our food in lard or shortening. We spread butter on our breakfast
toast and plopped sour cream on our baked potatoes. Farmers bred their
animals to produce milk with high butterfat content and meat
"marbled" with fat because that was what most people wanted to
eat.
But ever since word
got out that diets high in fat are related to heart disease, things have
become more complicated. Experts tell us there are several different kinds
of fat, some of them worse for us than others. In addition to saturated,
monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats, there are triglycerides, trans
fatty acids, and omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids.
Most people have
learned something about cholesterol, and many of us have been to the
doctor for a blood test to learn our cholesterol "number." Now,
however, it turns out that there's more than one kind of cholesterol, too.
Almost every day
there are newspaper reports of new studies or recommendations about what
to eat or what not to eat: Lard is bad, olive oil is good, margarine is
better for you than butter-- then again, maybe it's not.
Amid the welter of
confusing terms and conflicting details, consumers are often baffled about
how to improve their diets.
FDA recently issued
new regulations that will enable consumers to see clearly on a food
product's label how much and what kind of fat the product contains. (See
"A Little Lite Reading" in the June 1993 FDA Consumer.)
Understanding the terms used to discuss fat is crucial if you want to make
sure your diet is within recommended guidelines (see accompanying
article).
Fats and Fatty
Acids
Fats are a group of
chemical compounds that contain fatty acids. Energy is stored in the body
mostly in the form of fat. Fat is needed in the diet to supply essential
fatty acids, substances essential for growth but not produced by the body
itself.
There are three main
types of fatty acids: saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated. All
fatty acids are molecules composed mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms. A
saturated fatty acid has the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms
attached to every carbon atom. It is therefore said to be
"saturated" with hydrogen atoms.
Some fatty acids are
missing one pair of hydrogen atoms in the middle of the molecule. This gap
is called an "unsaturation" and the fatty acid is said to be
"monounsaturated" because it has one gap. Fatty acids that are
missing more than one pair of hydrogen atoms are called
"polyunsaturated."
Saturated fats
(which contain saturated fatty acids) are mostly found in foods of animal
origin. Monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats (which contain
monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids) are mostly found in foods
of plant origin and some seafoods. Polyunsaturated fatty acids are of two
kinds, omega-3 or omega-6. Scientists tell them apart by where in the
molecule the "unsaturations," or missing hydrogen atoms, occur.
Recently a new term
has been added to the fat lexicon: trans fatty acids. These are byproducts
of partial hydrogenation, a process in which some of the missing hydrogen
atoms are put back into polyunsaturated fats. "Partially hydrogenated
vegetable oils," such as vegetable shortening and margarine, are
solid at room temperature.
Cholesterol
Cholesterol is sort
of a "cousin" of fat. Both fat and cholesterol belong to a
larger family of chemical compounds called lipids. All the cholesterol the
body needs is made by the liver. It is used to build cell membranes and
brain and nerve tissues. Cholesterol also helps the body produce steroid
hormones needed for body regulation, including processing food, and bile
acids needed for digestion.
People don't need to
consume dietary cholesterol because the body can make enough cholesterol
for its needs. But the typical U.S. diet contains substantial amounts of
cholesterol, found in foods such as egg yolks, liver, meat, some
shellfish, and whole-milk dairy products. Only foods of animal origin
contain cholesterol.
Cholesterol is
transported in the bloodstream in large molecules of fat and protein
called lipoproteins. Cholesterol carried in low-density lipoproteins is
called LDL-cholesterol; most cholesterol is of this type. Cholesterol
carried in high-density lipoproteins is called HDL-cholesterol. (See
"Fat Words.")
A person's
cholesterol "number" refers to the total amount of cholesterol
in the blood. Cholesterol is measured in milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl)
of blood. (A deciliter is a tenth of a liter.)
Doctors recommend
that total blood cholesterol be kept below 200 mg/dl. The average level in
adults in this country is 205 to 215 mg/dl. Studies in the United States
and other countries have consistently shown that total cholesterol levels
above 200 to 220 mg/dl are linked with an increased risk of coronary heart
disease. (See "Lowering Cholesterol" in the March 1994 FDA
Consumer.)
LDL-cholesterol and
HDL-cholesterol act differently in the body. A high level of
LDL-cholesterol in the blood increases the risk of fatty deposits forming
in the arteries, which in turn increases the risk of a heart attack. Thus,
LDL-cholesterol has been dubbed "bad" cholesterol.
On the other hand,
an elevated level of HDL-cholesterol seems to have a protective effect
against heart disease. For this reason, HDL-cholesterol is often called
"good" cholesterol.
In 1992, a panel of
medical experts convened by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
recommended that individuals should have their level of HDL-cholesterol
checked along with their total cholesterol.
According to the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), a component of NIH, a
healthy person who is not at high risk for heart disease and whose total
cholesterol level is in the normal range (around 200 mg/dl) should have an
HDL-cholesterol level of more than 35 mg/dl. NHLBI also says that an
LDL-cholesterol level of less than 130 mg/dl is "desirable" to
minimize the risk of heart disease.
Some very recent
studies have suggested that LDL-cholesterol is more likely to cause fatty
deposits in the arteries if it has been through a chemical change known as
oxidation. However, these findings are not accepted by all scientists.
The NIH panel also
advised that individuals with high total cholesterol or other risk factors
for coronary heart disease should have their triglyceride levels checked
along with their HDL-cholesterol levels.
Triglycerides and
VLDL
Triglyceride is
another form in which fat is transported through the blood to the body
tissues. Most of the body's stored fat is in the form of triglycerides.
Another lipoprotein--very low-density lipoprotein, or VLDL--has the job of
carrying triglycerides in the blood. NHLBI considers a triglyceride level
below 250 mg/dl to be normal.
It is not clear
whether high levels of triglycerides alone increase an individual's risk
of heart disease. However, they may be an important clue that someone is
at risk of heart disease for other reasons. Many people who have elevated
triglycerides also have high LDL-cholesterol or low HDL-cholesterol.
People with diabetes or kidney disease--two conditions that increase the
risk of heart disease--are also prone to high triglycerides.
Dietary Fat and
Cholesterol Levels
Many people are
confused about the effect of dietary fats on cholesterol levels. At first
glance, it seems reasonable to think that eating less cholesterol would
reduce a person's cholesterol level. In fact, eating less cholesterol has
less effect on blood cholesterol levels than eating less saturated fat.
However, some studies have found that eating cholesterol increases the
risk of heart disease even if it doesn't increase blood cholesterol
levels.
Another
misconception is that people can improve their cholesterol numbers by
eating "good" cholesterol. In food, all cholesterol is the same.
In the blood, whether cholesterol is "good" or "bad"
depends on the type of lipoprotein that's carrying it.
Polyunsaturated and
monounsaturated fats do not promote the formation of artery-clogging fatty
deposits the way saturated fats do. Some studies show that eating foods
that contain these fats can reduce levels of LDL-cholesterol in the blood.
Polyunsaturated fats, such as safflower and corn oil, tend to lower both
HDL- and LDL-cholesterol. Edible oils rich in monounsaturated fats, such
as olive and canola oil, however, tend to lower LDL-cholesterol without
affecting HDL levels.
How Do We Know
Fat's a Problem?
In 1908, scientists
first observed that rabbits fed a diet of meat, whole milk, and eggs
developed fatty deposits on the walls of their arteries that constricted
the flow of blood. Narrowing of the arteries by these fatty deposits is
called atherosclerosis. It is a slowly progressing disease that can begin
early in life but not show symptoms for many years. In 1913, scientists
identified the substance responsible for the fatty deposits in the
rabbits' arteries as cholesterol.
In 1916, Cornelius
de Langen, a Dutch physician working in Java, Indonesia, noticed that
native Indonesians had much lower rates of heart disease than Dutch
colonists living on the island. He reported this finding to a medical
journal, speculating that the Indonesians' healthy hearts were linked with
their low levels of blood cholesterol.
De Langen also
noticed that both blood cholesterol levels and rates of heart disease
soared among Indonesians who abandoned their native diet of mostly plant
foods and ate a typical Dutch diet containing a lot of meat and dairy
products. This was the first recorded suggestion that diet, cholesterol
levels, and heart disease were related in humans. But de Langen's
observations lay unnoticed in an obscure medical journal for more than 40
years.
After World War II,
medical researchers in Scandinavia noticed that deaths from heart disease
had declined dramatically during the war, when food was rationed and meat,
dairy products, and eggs were scarce. At about the same time, other
researchers found that people who suffered heart attacks had higher levels
of blood cholesterol than people who did not have heart attacks.
Since then, a large
body of scientific evidence has been gathered linking high blood
cholesterol and a diet high in animal fats with an elevated risk of heart
attack. In countries where the average person's blood cholesterol level is
less than 180 mg/dl, very few people develop atherosclerosis or have heart
attacks. In many countries where a lot of people have blood cholesterol
levels above 220 mg/dl, such as the United States, heart disease is the
leading cause of death.
High rates of heart
disease are commonly found in countries where the diet is heavy with meat
and dairy products containing a lot of saturated fats. However, high-fat
diets and high rates of heart disease don't inevitably go hand-in-hand.
Learning from Other
Cultures
People living on the
Greek island of Crete have very low rates of heart disease even though
their diet is high in fat. Most of their dietary fat comes from olive oil,
a monounsaturated fat that tends to lower levels of "bad"
LDL-cholesterol and maintain levels of "good" HDL-cholesterol.
The Inuit, or
Eskimo, people of Alaska and Greenland also are relatively free of heart
disease despite a high-fat, high-cholesterol diet. The staple food in
their diet is fish rich in omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids.
Some research has
shown that omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish such as salmon and mackerel
as well as in soybean and canola oil, lower both LDL-cholesterol and
triglyceride levels in the blood. Some nutrition experts recommend eating
fish once or twice a week to reduce heart disease risk. However, dietary
supplements containing concentrated fish oil are not recommended because
there is insufficient evidence that they are beneficial and little is
known about their long-term effects.
Omega-6
polyunsaturated fatty acids have also been found in some studies to reduce
both LDL- and HDL-cholesterol levels in the blood. Linoleic acid, an
essential nutrient (one that the body cannot make for itself) and a
component of corn, soybean and safflower oil, is an omega-6 fatty acid.
At one time, many
nutrition experts recommended increasing consumption of monounsaturated
and polyunsaturated fats because of their cholesterol-lowering effects.
Now, however, the advice is simply to reduce dietary intake of all types
of fat. (Infants and young children, however, should not restrict dietary
fat.)
The available
information on fats may be voluminous and is sometimes confusing. But
sorting through the information becomes easier once you know the terms and
some of the history.
The "bottom
line" is actually quite simple, according to John E. Vanderveen,
Ph.D., director of the Office of Plant and Dairy Foods and Beverages in
FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. "What we should
be doing is removing as much of the saturated fat from our diet as we can.
We need to select foods that are lower in total fat and especially in
saturated fat." In a nutshell, that means eating fewer foods of
animal origin, such as meat and whole-milk dairy products, and more plant
foods such as vegetables and grains.
Fat Words
Here are brief
definitions of the key terms important to an understanding of the role of
fat in the diet.
Cholesterol:
A chemical compound manufactured in the body. It is used to build cell
membranes and brain and nerve tissues. Cholesterol also helps the body
make steroid hormones and bile acids.
Dietary
cholesterol: Cholesterol found in animal products that are part of the
human diet. Egg yolks, liver, meat, some shellfish, and whole-milk dairy
products are all sources of dietary cholesterol.
Fatty acid: A
molecule composed mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms. Fatty acids are the
building blocks of fats.
Fat: A
chemical compound containing one or more fatty acids. Fat is one of the
three main constituents of food (the others are protein and carbohydrate).
It is also the principal form in which energy is stored in the body.
Hydrogenated fat:
A fat that has been chemically altered by the addition of hydrogen atoms
(see trans fatty acid). Vegetable oil and margarine are hydrogenated fats.
Lipid: A
chemical compound characterized by the fact that it is insoluble in water.
Both fat and cholesterol are members of the lipid family.
Lipoprotein:
A chemical compound made of fat and protein. Lipoproteins that have more
fat than protein are called low-density lipoproteins (LDL). Lipoproteins
that have more protein than fat are called high-density lipoproteins (HDL).
Lipoproteins are found in the blood, where their main function is to carry
cholesterol.
Monounsaturated
fatty acid: A fatty acid that is missing one pair of hydrogen atoms in
the middle of the molecule. The gap is called an "unsaturation."
Monounsaturated fatty acids are found mostly in plant and sea foods.
Monounsaturated
fat: A fat made of monounsaturated fatty acids. Olive oil and canola
oil are monounsaturated fats. Monounsaturated fats tend to lower levels of
LDL-cholesterol in the blood.
Polyunsaturated
fatty acid: A fatty acid that is missing more than one pair of
hydrogen atoms. Polyunsaturated fatty acids are mostly found in plant and
sea foods.
Polyunsaturated
fat: A fat made of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Safflower oil and corn
oil are polyunsaturated fats. Polyunsaturated fats tend to lower levels of
both HDL-cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol in the blood.
Saturated fatty
acid: A fatty acid that has the maximum possible number of hydrogen
atoms attached to every carbon atom. It is said to be
"saturated" with hydrogen atoms. Saturated fatty acids are
mostly found in animal products such as meat and whole milk.
Saturated fat:
A fat made of saturated fatty acids. Butter and lard are saturated fats.
Saturated fats tend to raise levels of LDL-cholesterol ("bad"
cholesterol) in the blood. Elevated levels of LDL-cholesterol are
associated with heart disease.
Trans fatty acid:
A polyunsaturated fatty acid in which some of the missing hydrogen atoms
have been put back in a chemical process called hydrogenation. Trans fatty
acids are the building blocks of hydrogenated fats.
By: Eleanor Mayfield
Eleanor is a writer in Silver Spring, Md.
Government Advice
Dietary guidelines
endorsed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services advise consumers to:
-
Reduce total
dietary fat intake to 30 percent or less of total calories.
-
Reduce saturated
fat intake to less than 10 percent of calories.
-
Reduce
cholesterol intake to less than 300 milligrams daily.
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