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Coconut oil isn't healthy. It's never been healthy.

Arnold

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Coconut oil isn't healthy. It's never been healthy.

The American Heart Association recently released a report advising against the use of coconut oil.

The Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease advisory reviewed existing data on saturated fat, showing coconut oil increased LDL ("bad") cholesterol in seven out of seven controlled trials. Researchers didn't see a difference between coconut oil and other oils high in saturated fat, like butter, beef fat and palm oil. In fact, 82% of the fat in coconut oil is saturated, according to the data — far beyond butter (63%), beef fat (50%) and pork lard (39%).

"Because coconut oil increases LDL cholesterol, a cause of CVD [cardiovascular disease], and has no known offsetting favorable effects, we advise against the use of coconut oil," the American Heart Association said in the Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease advisory.

Frank Sacks, lead author on the report, said he has no idea why people think coconut oil is healthy. It's almost 100% fat. Past weight loss studies might be responsible.

“The reason coconut oil is so popular for weight loss is partly due to my research on medium chain triglycerides," Marie-Pierre St-Onge, associate professor of nutritional medicine at Cornell University Medical School, told TIME in April. "Coconut oil has a higher proportion of medium-chain triglycerides than most other fats or oils, and my research showed eating medium-chain triglycerides may increase the rate of metabolism more than eating long-chain triglycerides.”

The problem is St-Onge's research used a "designer oil" packed with 100% MCTs. Traditional coconut oil only contains about 13 to 15%. Another study she published showed smaller doses of MCTs doesn't help with weight loss in overweight adolescents.

The AHA recommends eating no more than 6% of saturated fat as part of total daily calories for those who need lower cholesterol.

Before you trash your coconut oil, know that saturated fat is a loaded term. While the AHA warns against it, people who cut saturated fat out of their diet might not necessarily lower their heart disease risk, a 2015 BMJ review suggested. That's because some people fill the void with sugar, white flour and empty calories. Also, some fat is important to help bodies absorb nutrients from other foods. Many have said butter has gotten a bad reputation.

Still, it might not be a bad idea to opt for vegetable oils or olive oil, Stacks said. Plus, coconut oil can still be an effective moisturizer or hair conditioner.

"You can put it on your body, but don’t put it in your body," Sacks said.

Source: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...snt-healthy-its-never-been-healthy/402719001/
 

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Prince said:
Still, it might not be a bad idea to opt for vegetable oils
Fucking vegetable oil? Are they smoking crack? What a horrible piece of advice.
 
th


i like full synthetic...Over The Top..bAby!!
 
Lolz @ the AHA... the same organization that thinks fats are more detrimental to health than processed carbohydrates. Fuck an avacado eat moar pasta!
 
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You have to look at the source of the info, they simply have a lot to lose if people became heart healthy. If the AHA was honestly concerned about heart health they would be funding research to FURTHER support that cardiovascular disease is just subclinical survey.
 
It's just a fat. People WAY over complicate things. Get a good ratio of omega 3 and 6 and your rda on saturated fats, completely avoid trans fats and don't worry about it. Seriously. It's not hard.
 
What does this mean?

Unfortunately, the medical establishment has by and large one size fits all definitions of what entails any given disease. Scurvy is a disease state associated with lack of vitamin C. Basically without ample vitamin C your body can not keep up with the needs for collagen synthesis and the collagen in your body begins to break down. Peoples skin becomes weak, they bruise easily, bleed from gums and generally all their collagen-based tissues begin to break down.

When I say subclinical I am referring to a state that doesnt have all the typical external signs associated with the disease BUT are still suffering from damage. Specifically, in regards to the heart and cardiovascular disease, arteries are largely collagen-based material. When arteries suffer damage they crack and lose elasticity, like a dried hose. These cracks expose the intum to fluids in the blood stream and the cholesterol in the blood stream collects to and acts as a bandage to the micro cracks internally. This buildup is supposed to be a short term fix and the collected cholesterol WILL break free IF the underlying arterial damage is fixed. The medical community has long blamed cholesterol for being THE problem in cardiovascular disease, but its not, its a symptom! The real problem is the underlying arterial damage that doesnt get healed due to lack of vitamin C. All this arterial damage and cholesterol buildup causes excess strain and reduced blood flow to the heart so heart disease and CVD are often times very closely related.
 
The standard American diet is far different than the diet that works the best for bodybuilding. We all know how beneficial coconut oil is.
 

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