Are
some fats more 'fattening' than other fats?
Researchers
from McGill School of Dietetics in Montreal
(Professor Peter Jones and colleagues) developed
a blend of oil high in 'medium chain triglycerides'.
(Most conventional oils/fats are high in
long chain triglycerides). The ingredients
of this research oil were mostly tropical
oils such as palm oil and coconut oil, with
some olive oil and flaxseed (linseed) oil.
Apart from being high in medium chain triglycerides,
it was also high in monounsaturated fat
and omega 3 fat. The researchers said that
their blend of oil is sent straight to the
liver and burned up rather than being deposited
as body fat. They studied male and female
volunteers for 27 days, and despite eating
the same quantity of oil as others given
conventional cooking oil, the men lost an
average of one pound. The women did not
lose any weight. All volunteers ate a normal
"north American" diet during the
study.
In
agreement with the above study, researchers
from John Hopkins Research Institute reported
at a meeting held by the American College
of Cardiology, that the more saturated fats
you eat (found in animal fat, hydrogenated
vegetable fat) the higher the level of visceral
fat (or fat that surrounds the organs in
the abdomen). In contrast, a diet high in
monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fat,
including omega 3 fats, (found in olives,
nuts, legumes, seeds, vegetable oils, fish,
avocados) tends to create less visceral
fat. Visceral fat is undesirable because
it is linked to diabetes, hypertension and
high blood fats (it is more metabolically
active than fat located under the skin or
subcutaneous fat).
In
another study conducted by Kasai et al,
published in the Asia
Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition June
2003, showed that volunteers consuming
the test bread containing medium chain triglycerides
lost more weight than volunteers consuming
bread containing long chain triglycerides.
Click
here to read the abstract (only subscribers
to the journal can view the full paper).
In
another US study, it was found that dieters
who ate fat free yoghurt lost almost twice
as much weight around their waistline compared
to those who did not. The researchers suggest
that the calcium in yoghurt may help the
body's ability to burn fat. However, fat
free yoghurt is also very low in saturarted
fat which may help fat loss.
Last
Updated: June 2003
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