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Soybean oil causes more obesity than coconut oil, fructose

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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/07/150722144640.htm

A diet high in soybean oil causes more obesity and diabetes than a diet high in fructose, a sugar commonly found in soda and processed foods, according to a just published paper by scientists at the University of California, Riverside.

The scientists fed male mice a series of four diets that contained 40 percent fat, similar to what Americans currently consume. In one diet the researchers used coconut oil, which consists primarily of saturated fat. In the second diet about half of the coconut oil was replaced with soybean oil, which contains primarily polyunsaturated fats and is a main ingredient in vegetable oil. That diet corresponded with roughly the amount of soybean oil Americans currently consume.

The other two diets had added fructose, comparable to the amount consumed by many Americans. All four diets contained the same number of calories and there was no significant difference in the amount of food eaten by the mice on the diets. Thus, the researchers were able to study the effects of the different oils and fructose in the context of a constant caloric intake.

Compared to mice on the high coconut oil diet, mice on the high soybean oil diet showed increased weight gain, larger fat deposits, a fatty liver with signs of injury, diabetes and insulin resistance, all of which are part of the Metabolic Syndrome. Fructose in the diet had less severe metabolic effects than soybean oil although it did cause more negative effects in the kidney and a marked increase in prolapsed rectums, a symptom of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), which like obesity is on the rise.

The mice on the soybean oil-enriched diet gained almost 25 percent more weight than the mice on the coconut oil diet and 9 percent more weight than those on the fructose-enriched diet. And the mice on the fructose-enriched diet gained 12 percent more weight than those on a coconut oil rich diet.

"This was a major surprise for us -- that soybean oil is causing more obesity and diabetes than fructose -- especially when you see headlines everyday about the potential role of sugar consumption in the current obesity epidemic," said Poonamjot Deol, the assistant project scientist who directed the project in the lab of Frances M. Sladek, a professor of cell biology and neuroscience.

The paper, "Soybean oil is more obesogenic and diabetogenic than coconut oil and fructose in mouse: potential role for the liver," was published July 22 in the journal PLOS ONE.

In the U.S. the consumption of soybean oil has increased greatly in the last four decades due to a number of factors, including results from studies in the 1960s that found a positive correlation between saturated fatty acids and the risk of cardiovascular disease. As a result of these studies, nutritional guidelines were created that encouraged people to reduce their intake of saturated fats, commonly found in meat and dairy products, and increase their intake of polyunsaturated fatty acids found in plant oils, such as soybean oil.

Implementation of those new guidelines, as well as an increase in the cultivation of soybeans in the United States, has led to a remarkable increase in the consumption of soybean oil, which is found in processed foods, margarines, salad dressings and snack foods. Soybean oil now accounts for 60 percent of edible oil consumed in the United States. That increase in soybean oil consumption mirrors the rise in obesity rates in the United States in recent decades.

During the same time, fructose consumption in the United States significantly increased, from about 37 grams per day in 1977 to about 49 grams per day in 2004.

The research outlined in the paper is believed to be the first side-by-side look at the impacts of saturated fat, unsaturated fat and fructose on obesity, diabetes, insulin resistance and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, which along with heart disease and hypertension, are referred to as the Metabolic Syndrome.

The study also includes extensive analysis of changes in gene expression and metabolite levels in the livers of mice fed these diets. The most striking results were those showing that soybean oil significantly affects the expression of many genes that metabolize drugs and other foreign compounds that enter the body, suggesting that a soybean oil-enriched diet could affect one's response to drugs and environmental toxicants, if humans show the same response as mice.

The UC Riverside researchers also did a study with corn oil, which induced more obesity than coconut oil but not quite as much as soybean oil. They are currently doing tests with lard and olive oil. They have not tested canola oil or palm oil.

The researchers cautioned that they didn't study the impacts of the diets on cardiovascular diseases and note in the paper that the consumption of vegetable oils could be beneficial for cardiac health, even if it also induces obesity and diabetes.

They also noted that there are many different types of saturated and unsaturated fats. This is particularly true for the saturated fats in animal products that were associated with heart disease in the studies in the 1960s: they tend to have a longer chain length than the saturated fats in coconut oil.

The latest paper relates to previously released findings by scientists in Sladek's lab and at the UC Davis West Coast Metabolomics Center, which compared regular soybean oil to a new genetically modified soybean oil.

That research, presented at a conference in March, found that the new genetically modified, high oleic soybean oil (Plenish), which has a lower amount of polyunsaturated fatty acid than traditional soybean oil, is healthier than regular soybean oil but just barely. Using mice, the researchers found that the Plenish oil also induces fatty liver although somewhat less obesity and diabetes. Importantly, it did not cause insulin resistance, a pre-diabetic condition. It should be noted that both the regular soybean oil and Plenish are from soybeans that are genetically modified to be resistant to the herbicide RoundUp.

The researchers are now finalizing a manuscript about these findings that also incorporates tests done with olive oil.
 

Guevara

Member
I think in the U.S. soybean oil is more generally just "vegetable oil" and it is in everything.

However, I do think it's way easier to add a shitload of sugar to most process foods, than a shitload of oil.
 
Some oils/fats you should try to cook with and/or consume: coconut oil, olive oil, avocado oil, lard / other pastured animal fats, MCT oil.

A majority of commonly sold cooking oils derived from plants/vegetables is omega-6-heavy junk.
 

Bodacious

Banned
The UC Riverside researchers also did a study with corn oil, which induced more obesity than coconut oil but not quite as much as soybean oil. They are currently doing tests with lard and olive oil. They have not tested canola oil or palm oil.

Probably the healthiest. McDonald's should switch back to cooking their fries in beef tallow.
 

entremet

Member
Not surprised. These refined vegetable oils are horrible.

Probably the healthiest. McDonald's should switch back to cooking their fries in beef tallow.

Taste much better, but it will never happen due to the various vegetarian groups that sued them.
 

WedgeX

Banned
Well why the hell haven't I lost weight having no soybean oil at al in my diet due to an allergy??

Got dang it.
 

antonz

Member
Could help explain a lot. Soybean Oil has become common in so many things then throw in how much HFCS the average American takes in and it is a double whammy of make ya fat
 
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thepotatoman

Unconfirmed Member
The UC Riverside researchers also did a study with corn oil, which induced more obesity than coconut oil but not quite as much as soybean oil. They are currently doing tests with lard and olive oil. They have not tested canola oil or palm oil.

I'll be very interested to see what these tests come up with.

I've already cut out most fructose and switched to whole grain stuff, but I still get a ton of calories from vegetable oil, and cutting back on the only thing left to make food taste good is not really option. But substituting it for something similar could be an option. It's worth a try at least. Coconut oil and olive oil are at least 4 times as expensive, but it'd be worth it if the benefits are that large.
 

way more

Member
Does the consumption of vegetable oil mean from using it when cooking because it doesn't strike me as that much added. Consumption must be coming from bagged snacks and the like.

which is found in processed foods, margarines, salad dressings and snack foods.

I doubt using coconut instead of canola oil in your cooking really does much unless you prepare a lot cakes and other pastries.


Is canola oil good?


I'm been asking this question for the past 10 years and it seems like it is. I've only ever seen Food Babe level critiques against it (ie, pointless melding of elements that is meaningless).
 
We've gotten rid of all vegetable oil in our cooking at home. Only use olive oil or unrefined coconut oil. Occasionally bacon fat if we have any bacon. We'll save the grease and reuse it.


We also eat almost zero processed foods. I've lost weight without changing how much I eat or my physical activity level.
 

entremet

Member
Does the consumption of vegetable oil mean from using it when cooking because it doesn't strike me as that much added. Consumption must be coming from bagged snacks and the like.



I doubt using coconut instead of canola oil in your cooking really does much unless you prepare a lot cakes and other pastries.
That's right, unless you're deep frying all day err day lol.

But for a quick sauté, seems negligible.

Don't neglect butter for sautéing food. Great flavor.
 

WedgeX

Banned
Does the consumption of vegetable oil mean from using it when cooking because it doesn't strike me as that much added. Consumption must be coming from bagged snacks and the like.

Soybean oil is the default oil in near every bread, snack, and food product requiring an oil. While this doesn't account for how it affected the rats compared to any other oil, it's definitely consumed near every day by near every US citizen.
 

entremet

Member
This is nigh impossible to study in humans, btw, if you want to establish clear cause and effect.

Unless you want to keep someone in a metabolic ward for years, which is not practical.

Many food studies are based on self reporting, which can be horribly inaccurate.

Not to mention variations in age, sex, race, and other genetic markers.
 
Grapeseed oil and peanut oil are fucking expensive alternatives, though. (In regards to high smoke points.)

I assumed grapeseed/avacado oil was more of a specialty oil? I don't know that much, but from what I know coconut oil good for things that take much longer to cook. When we have enough money, I cook with Olive oil... But for now we just have vegetable oil... :/.
 
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thepotatoman

Unconfirmed Member
That's right, unless you're deep frying all day err day lol.

But for a quick sauté, seems negligible.

Don't neglect butter for sautéing food. Great flavor.

It's pretty easy to use a lot of oil when sauteing something. It's pretty easy to start with 2 tablespoons, adding another tablespoon a couple times over the course of cooking as it dries out, and all of a sudden you have a 1/4 cup of oil nearing 500 calories worth in that dish, and that's probably conservative. Even if you don't do that, I bet you the restaurants you eat at do.
 

entremet

Member
It's pretty easy to use a lot of oil when sauteing something. It's pretty easy to start with 2 tablespoons, adding another tablespoon a couple times over the course of cooking as it dries out, and all of a sudden you have a 1/4 cup of oil nearing 500 calories worth in that dish, and that's probably conservative. Even if you don't do that, I bet you the restaurants you eat at do.

The whole point of sautéing is not to use a lot of oil. It's high heat and low fat usage. It's a very quick way of cooking things.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sautéing

Otherwise you're shallow frying.
 
I wonder if mice that were on the high soybean oil diet were less active than mice on the other diets. That could explain why they were gaining more weight than the other mice, even though they were eating the same number of calories.
 

tokkun

Member
This is one study I would like to see independently recreated. 25% is a huge difference for a calorie controlled diet.
 

way more

Member
It's pretty easy to use a lot of oil when sauteing something. It's pretty easy to start with 2 tablespoons, adding another tablespoon a couple times over the course of cooking as it dries out, and all of a sudden you have a 1/4 cup of oil nearing 500 calories worth in that dish, and that's probably conservative. Even if you don't do that, I bet you the restaurants you eat at do.

I assure you restaurants don't cook as incompetently as you otherwise dishes would take too long and be too expensive.
 
I knew it was just a matter of time before this becomes another trend. If this means most places switch back to frying with lard and tallow, please let the trendiness commence.
 

entremet

Member
I knew it was just a matter of time before this becomes another trend. If this means most places switch back to frying with lard and tallow, please let the trendiness commence.

I can't see that with vegetarianism in its various forms on the rise.

Coconut oil is nice from a vegetarian standpoint, but it's expensive and leaves coconut off flavors.
 
Soy is getting blamed for everything. There is some "conspiracy" about that it's high estrogen content fucks up with mens hormone levels, and can give them the early symptoms of moobs (man titties).
But many things contain estrogen that men have always consumed on a regular basis (like beer).
I know many guys who stay out of it soy all together, which is really hard if you are into asian food.

I use it just as adding salt. I use ketchup instead of sugar. I find using these are good alternatives to regular seasoning even.



regarding olive oil changing chemically upon being used in a pan: I'm quite surprised. I actually thought olive oil turned into trans fat when you heated it up. interesting:

Oxidized fats, which are primarily derived from polyunsaturated oils such as corn and soybean oils, are linked to inflammation and various diseases. Studies have been conducted comparing virgin olive oil with sunflower oil (a polyunsaturated oil) and cooking oils where antioxidants were added. These antioxidants, which are present naturally in high quality olive oils, protect against oxidative stress and inflammation when high heat is applied to the oils.3 In fact, the antioxidants present in olives are so powerful in resisting oxidation due to heat, that they are added to other cooking oils to make them more stable when cooking.4 - See more at: http://healthimpactnews.com/2014/my...-for-frying-and-cooking/#sthash.SjYCEua1.dpuf


In a nutshell, virgin olive oil can safely be used for cooking and even deep frying. The oil can be reused more than once, and the oil does not seriously degrade in normal household cooking. Olive oil is sensitive to sunlight, however, and is therefore usually packaged in tinted bottles.

Richard Gawel, an internationally known olive oil expert, also recommends the use of olive oil for cooking. He is a consultant taster and blender for a number of Australian olive oil companies, and has been the presiding judge of major olive oil shows in Australia and New Zealand, as well as the Los Angeles International Extra Virgin olive oil show.6

- See more at: http://healthimpactnews.com/2014/my...-for-frying-and-cooking/#sthash.SjYCEua1.dpuf

Good info; http://healthimpactnews.com/2014/my...ne-of-the-safest-oils-for-frying-and-cooking/



I use sesame, coconut and olive oil myself and I recommend them all. I also have rapseed oil for certain things. I suggest you swap peanut oil for coconut oil and sesame oil.
 
I really like using Peanut oil for panfrying; the high smoke point and lake of really noticeable flavor (at least, to me, compared to coconut and sesame oil) makes for some mean Orange Chicken.
 
D

Deleted member 17706

Unconfirmed Member
What precisely would be the proposed mechanism here?

I'm not sure there is one being proposed by the people who did this study, but if soybean oil were truly a contributing factor to overweight, I imagine the mechanism at play would be inflammation.
 
What precisely would be the proposed mechanism here?
Depending on how precise you're asking, according to the paper's Discussion section the authors state that the soybean oil diet (SO-HFD) increases the sizes of both the hepatocytes and lipid drops kept in storage. Moreover, they found that the diet also upregulates the gene Pdk4 which in turn represses the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex.

I'll just copy and paste the rest
Deol et al. PLOS One 2015 said:
Repression of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex shifts the balance towards gluconeogenesis which could result in hyperglycemia. Consistent with our findings are reports that PDK4 expression is increased in diabetics and that Pdk4-/- mice are resistant to HFD-induced hepatic steatosis and are more glucose tolerant. Thus Pdk4 upregulation may be a contributing factor to both lipid accumulation in the liver and the development of diabetes and glucose intolerance in SO-HFD mice.
 
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