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This may sound strange coming from someone who writes about health and
nutrition, but no sooner had I mastered the differences between
saturated and unsaturated fat then there was a new fat to contend with
-- trans fatty acids, or "trans fats."
To listen to the media and nutrition experts, you'd think that
eating trans fats is tantamount to consuming pure poison. I began to
wonder -- just how bad are trans fats, and why are we only just
beginning to hear more about them?
Trans fats became
popularized when Walter Willett, M.D., chairman of the Harvard School
of Public Health's Department of Nutrition, completed a study involving
80,000 women. His results showed that for every 5% increase in the
amount of saturated fats a woman consumed, her risk of heart disease
increased by 17%, while only a 2% increase in trans fats increased her
heart disease risk by 93%. Additionally, Willett found that the risk of
type 2 diabetes rose by 39% from only a 2% increase in calories from
trans fats, whereas saturated fat did not affect diabetes at all.
While
meat and dairy products contain small amounts of naturally-occurring
trans fat, the majority of trans fat is created artificially by
bubbling hydrogen gas through vegetable oil, a process called partial
hydrogenation. This transforms some of the oil's unsaturated fat (the
"good" fat) into trans fat, which raises LDL (the "bad" cholesterol),
just as saturated fat does. Worse yet, some studies have found that
trans fat lowers HDL (the "good" cholesterol), too.
So why do many
food manufacturers use hydrogenated vegetable oil with full knowledge
of the serious health risks of trans fats? Easy -- they're great for
the food industry -- they keep foods from going stale so they can last
longer on the shelves; they're less expensive than butter; and they're
more stable, which is especially helpful for deep-frying foods.
But
is trans fat really a necessary ingredient? "It is put into the food
supply by the food industry and can be completely eliminated (the
Europeans have almost done this) without individuals needing to make
any changes in their diets," said Dr. Willett.
However,
most experts feel that an all-out ban is impractical. Instead, to
combat this information gap, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is
finalizing a plan that would require trans fat labeling on packaged
foods, prompted by the Institute of Medicine, a government advisory
agency that has conducted a number of studies on the health risks of
trans fats.
Public awareness of trans fats is already making a
difference. Frito-Lay told Consumer Reports that it plans to eliminate
trans fat from Cheetos, Doritos, and Tostitos, and McDonald's recently
decided to cut out nearly half the trans fats from their French
fries. Keep in mind, this reduction doesn't suddenly make fast
food a health food -- taking out the trans fat doesn't affect the
calories -- a super-size order of McDonald's fries still has 610
calories.
In fact, many nutrition experts think the attention
given to trans fats is "overkill" in that it narrowly focuses on only
one area of a person's diet. "I don't think the issue is trans fat at
all. The issue is healthy eating habits. How many Krispy Kremes
[doughnuts] do you need to eat? What does this add to your diet?" asks
Dr. Margo A. Denke, M.D., professor of nutrition at the University of
Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas.
Dr. Willett agrees
that overall diet is paramount, but he cautions that trans fats still
pose a formidable health risk: "The risks of obesity are worse than
eating large amounts of any kind of fat. However, we see that the
combination of obesity and high trans fat intake is a particularly bad
one for risk of type 2 diabetes."
So what is an acceptable level of trans fat?
"Because
they are not essential and provide no known health benefit to human
beings, there is no safe level of trans fatty acids, and people should
eat as little of them as possible while consuming a nutritionally
adequate diet," said Barbara Schneeman, professor of nutrition at the
University of California, Davis. "But I'm much more concerned about
excess calories that are consumed -- because almost as a matter of
course items that contain trans fatty acids are high in calories [fried
foods and bakery items]," added Dr. Schneeman.
The bottom line
is a familiar one: consume as little trans fat and saturated fat as
possible, and maintain a healthy weight. Most researchers recommend
reducing your intake of saturated and trans fats to less than 10% of
calories, or 20 grams per day of both fats combined.
Because
the trans fat content is not yet available on most food labels,
Consumer Reports and other health experts offer the following
recommendations for identifying trans fatty acids:
Know "suspect" foods: Look out for trans fats in many margarines
and shortenings, deep fried foods, fast foods, and many commercial
baked goods such as pies, cookies, cakes, crackers and doughnuts, and
other common packaged items. Exceptions include potato chips, pretzels,
peanut butter and salad dressings.
It might sound healthy:
Some packaged foods that sound "healthy" have trans fat lurking,
including Mrs. Smith's Apple Pie, Nabisco Wheat Thins, Kellogg's
Cracklin' Oat Bran Cereal, Kellogg's Eggo Buttermilk Frozen Waffles,
and Pillsbury Buttermilk Frozen Waffles.
Check the ingredients: Look for shortening or partially
hydrogenated oil in the ingredients list; the closer they are to the
beginning of the list, and the more total fat on the label, the more
trans fat the product probably contains.
Do the math: If
a product lists saturated, monounsaturated, and polyunsaturated fats,
check to see if those numbers add up to the total fat listed. If they
don't, there's a good chance trans fat makes up for some of the
difference.
Watch what they "claim:" Products can claim to be "low saturated fat" or "extra lean" even if they contain trans fats.
It may not matter: The combined total of trans and saturated fat
matters most. There is little benefit in choosing a food that's low in
trans fat if it's high in saturated fat, and vice versa. For example,
Consumer Reports revealed that Banquet Chicken Pot Pie had just a trace
of trans fat, but contains 7.5 grams of saturated fat.
Go soft: Look for soft or liquid margarines instead of hard
margarines; the softer the margarine, the less trans fat it contains.
And don't go running to butter just yet -- butter also contains trans
fats, not to mention loads of saturated fats.
CHARLES
STUART PLATKIN JD MPH is a nutrition and public health advocate, author
of the best seller Breaking the Pattern (Plume, 2005), Breaking the FAT
Pattern (Plume, 2006) and Lighten Up (Penguin USA/Razorbill, 2006) and
founder of Integrated Wellness Solutions. Copyright 2006 by Charles
Stuart Platkin. Sign up for the free The Diet Detective newsletter at
www.dietdetective.com .
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