A Norwegian study challenges the
long-held idea that saturated fats are unhealthy
A new Norwegian diet intervention study
(FATFUNC), performed by researchers at the KG Jebsen center for
diabetes research at the University of Bergen, raises questions
regarding the validity of a diet hypothesis that has dominated for
more than half a century: that dietary fat and particularly saturated
fat is unhealthy for most people.
The researchers found strikingly
similar health effects of diets based on either lowly processed
carbohydrates or fats. In the randomized controlled trial, 38 men
with abdominal obesity followed a dietary pattern high in either
carbohydrates or fat, of which about half was saturated. Fat mass in
the abdominal region, liver and heart was measured with accurate
analyses, along with a number of key risk factors for cardiovascular
disease.
"The very high intake of total
and saturated fat did not increase the calculated risk of
cardiovascular diseases," says professor and cardiologist
Ottar Nygård who contributed to the study.
"Participants on the
very-high-fat diet also had substantial improvements in several
important cardiometabolic risk factors, such as ectopic fat storage,
blood pressure, blood lipids (triglycerides), insulin and blood
sugar."
Both groups had similar intakes of
energy, proteins, polyunsaturated fatty acids, the food types were
the same and varied mainly in quantity, and intake of added sugar was
minimized.
"We here looked at effects of
total and saturated fat in the context of a healthy diet rich in
fresh, lowly processed and nutritious foods, including high amounts
of vegetables and rice instead of flour-based products," says
PhD candidate Vivian Veum.
"The fat sources were also
lowly processed, mainly butter, cream and cold-pressed oils."
Total energy intake was within the
normal range. Even the participants who increased their energy intake
during the study showed substantial reductions in fat stores and
disease risk.
"Our findings indicate that the
overriding principle of a healthy diet is not the quantity of fat or
carbohydrates, but the quality of the foods we eat," says
PhD candidate Johnny Laupsa-Borge.
Saturated fat increases the "good"
cholesterol. Saturated fat has been thought to promote
cardiovascular diseases by raising the "bad" LDL
cholesterol in the blood. But even with a higher fat intake in the
FATFUNC study compared to most comparable studies, the authors found
no significant increase in LDL cholesterol.
Rather, the "good"
cholesterol increased only on the very-high-fat diet.
"These results indicate that
most healthy people probably tolerate a high intake of saturated fat
well, as long as the fat quality is good and total energy intake is
not too high. It may even be healthy," says Ottar Nygård.
"Future studies should examine
which people or patients may need to limit their intake of saturated
fat," assistant professor Simon Nitter Dankel points out,
who led the study together with the director of the laboratory
clinics, professor Gunnar Mellgren, at Haukeland university hospital
in Bergen, Norway.
"But the alleged health risks
of eating good-quality fats have been greatly exaggerated. It may be
more important for public health to encourage reductions in processed
flour-based products, highly processed fats and foods with added
sugar," he says.
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