Mary Enig – Know Your Fats (2000)
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Know Your Fats: The Complete Primer for Understanding the Nutrition of Fats, Oils, and Cholesterol by Dr. Mary G. Enig PhD, 2000″This book, written by one of the world’s leading lipid biochemists, is a much needed title in today’s “fat-phobic” world. Discarding politically correct notions that saturated fats are unhealthy, Dr. Mary Enig presents a thorough, in-depth, and understandable look at the world of lipids.The publication of Know Your Fats is a rare treat: it is, to this reviewer’s knowledge, the ONLY book on fats and oils for the consumer and the professional written by a recognized authority in the field. Virtually all of the titles on fats and oils in print now are either too technical to be accessible by the layman, or are too error-laden to be worth the paper they are printed on.Mary Enig made her mark in the nutritional world in 1978 when she and her colleagues at the University of Maryland published a now-famous paper in the American journal Federation Proceedings. The paper directly challenged government assertions that higher cancer rates were associated with animal fat consumption. Enig, et al, concluded that the data actually showed vegetable oils and trans-fatty acids to be the culprits in both cancer and heart disease–not naturally saturated fats that people have been eating for millennia. In the ensuing years, Enig and her colleagues focused their work on determining the trans-fatty acid content of various food items, as well as publishing research that clearly demonstrated TFA’s to be potent carcinogens, prime factors in heart disease, disruptors of immune function, and worse.Enig’s book begins like any other on lipid biochemistry and discusses the nature of saturates, monounsaturates, polyunsaturates, and trans-fatty acids. Included also is a revealing discussion of cholesterol and its vital importance to the body. The first chapter also clearly discusses the molecular structure of different fatty acids (with diagrams) and presents the metabolic conversion products of each of the major fatty acids (oleic, linoleic, linolenic, and palmitoleic).The physiology of fats and cholesterol is fully covered in chapter two. Almost half of this chapter is devoted to shattering popular myths about saturated fats and their roles as disease promoters. Not mincing any words, Enig methodically demonstrates the faulty data and reasoning behind the ideas that saturates either cause or contribute to heart disease, diabetes, colon cancer, mental illness, obesity, and cerebrovascular disease. For example, after trashing the “data” that supposedly prove that beef and beef fat caused colon cancer, Enig flatly concludes: “And now, more than three (3) decades after the initial fraudulent report, the anti-animal fat hypothesis continues to lead the nutrition agenda. It was a false issue then, and it remains a false issue today.”Subsequent chapters deal with fats historically used in Western diets; the fatty acid composition of various oils and fats such as coconut, butter, lard, and olive oil; and a succinct summary of “fat facts.” The book is rounded out by detailed appendices on definitions, fatty acids in a huge number of foods, and molecular compositions of major fatty acids.What is most telling, however, is Enig’s insider take on the nutritional research world and the forces at play that manipulate the facts. Never one to shy away from controversy, Enig makes some pretty strong indictments of such organizations as the American Dietetics Association, the Center for Science in the Public Interest, the American Heart Association, and the food industry in general. More shocking are her thoughts on research scientists:”The common scenario is that of a highly intelligent person . . . who finds a research task that will lead to funding from the food and/or pharmaceutical industry or from the industry-controlled government agencies. If that research shows an adverse effect of any of the new foods studied, this is frequently ignored. . . . Of course, the research that is done by the industry-supported scientists is good basic research, and it usually is of great interest so as long as it supports the food industry or avoids a clash with the industry it is promoting. What seems so ironic, is that the very foods (saturated fats and cholesterol) that people are avoiding are the very foods that are healthful. When it comes to fat, this really has become the age of the flat earth.”Hopefully, Know Your Fats will help make the earth round once more.” Stephen ByrnesContentsPreface ixAcknowledgments xiIntroduction 1Chapter 1 Knowing the Basic Facts About Fats and Oils 91.1. What Are Fats and Oils? 91.2. What Are Bonds and Why Are They Important? 91.3. What Are Fatty Acids? 101.4. What About Saturated or Unsaturated or Isomers? 111.5. How Many Triglycerides Are in a Common Measure? 171.6. Why Are the Oils Liquid and the Fats Solid? 171.7. Why Are Animal Fats Called Saturated Fats? 181.8. How Are Fats and Oils Processed? 181.9. Why Are Oils Partially Hydrogenated? 191.10. Just How Are Partially Hydrogenated Fats Different from the Original Oil? 211.11. What Is Meant by the Terms Saturated, Monounsaturated, Polyunsaturated, and Trans? 231.12. What is Meant by the Term Omega? 251.13. Saturated Fatty Acids 301.14. Unsaturated Fatty Acids 331.15. Monounsaturated Fatty Acids 361.16. Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids 371.17. Trans Fatty Acids 381.18. Why Do We Need to Know About the Trans Fatty Acids? 421.19. What Do Research Studies Say About the Trans Fatty Acids? 421.20. But How Much Trans Do We Really Eat? 441.21. Odd-Chain and Branch-Chain Fatty Acids 451.22. What is Conjugated Linoleic Acid? 461.23. What About Olestra and Other Fat Replacers? 461.24. What about Cholesterol? 48Chapter 2 Lets Get Physical With Fats 512.1. The Digestion, Absorption and metabolism of Carbohydrates and Proteins as Related to Fats, Oils, and Cholesterol 512.2. What Do Carbohydrates and Proteins Have to Do with Fat? . . . . . . 512.3. How Does the Digestion and Absorption of Fat Happen? 552.4. What About Cholesterol? 562.5. The Physiology of Fats and Cholesterol 582.6. Fats and Lipids in Cell Membranes 582.7. Membrane Fatty Acids and Phospholipids 592.8. Membrane and Tissue Cholesterol 642.9. Fat as Enzyme Regulator 642.10. Essential Fatty Acids 652.11. Fatty Acids as Hormone Regulators 662.12. Cholesterol as Hormone Precursor 692.13. Lipoproteins 702.14. Fat For Emulsification 712.15. Fat as Carriers of Fat-Soluble Vitamins and Other Fat-soluble Nutrients 712.16. Fat as a Factor for Satiety 732.17. Fat as Protective Padding and Covering 732.18. Fat for Energy Storage 742.19. How Much Fat Reserve Do We Need Stored in Our Bodies? 752.20 Health Issues and Fats and Oils 762.20.1 Atherosclerosis 772.20.2. Cerebrovascular disease 802.20.3. Cancer 802.20.4. Diabetes 812.20.5. Obesity 822.20.6. Immune dysfunction 832.20.7. Mental illness 832.21. Animal Fats and Health Issues: What is the True Story? 842.22. Health Concerns Related to Consumption of Partially Hydrogenated Vegetable Fats and Oils 852.23. Some “Surprising” Health Effects of Selected Fats and Oils 872.24. What (Fats) Fatty Acids Found in Foods Are Natural to the Human Body? Not Natural to the Human Body? 88Chapter 3 Diets: Then and Now, Here and There 893.1. What Fats Are In, What Fats Are Out 893.2. Fat in Human Diets in Antiquity 913.3. How Much Fat Do We Really Eat in the United States? . . . . 923.4. Food Fat Production and Eating Habits in Late 1800s 963.5. Fat in Diets in the 1890s and Early 1900s 963.6. Fat in the Diets in the 1930s, 1940s, 1950s, 1960s 973.7. The “Industrial Revolution” for Fats and Oils Began in 1910 993.8. Role of Edible Oil Industry in Promoting Consumption of Trans Fatty Acids 993.9. Trans Fatty Acids in U.S. Foods and Elsewhere 1013.10. What Are Healthy Fats and Oils? 1043.11. What Balance of Fats Do We Need? 1043.12. Dietary Fat and Pregnancy and Lactation 1083.13. Dietary Fat and Growth 1093.14 A Dozen Important Dietary Does and Don’ts 111Chapter 4 The Many Sources of Fats and Oils 1134.1. Commonly Used Fruit/Seed Oils4.1.1 Canola Oil4.1.2. Cocoa Butter4.1.3. Coconut Oil4.1.4. Corn Oil4.1.5. Cottonseed Oil4.1.6. Olive Oil4.1.7. Palm Oil4.1.8. Palm Kernel Oil4.1.9. Peanut Oil4.1.10. Rapeseed Oil (Regular High-Erucic Acid Rapeseed Oil, Low-Erucic Acid Rapeseed Oil Canola, and Laurate Canola)4.1.11. Safflower Oil4.1.12. Sesame Oil4.1.13. Soybean Oil4.1.14. Sunflower Seed Oil4.1.15. Selected Characteristics of Commonly Used Fruit/Seed Oils4.2. Less Commonly Used Fruit/Seed Oils 1264.2.1. Almond Oil 1264.2.2. Avocado Oil 1274.2.3. Black Currant Oil, Borage Oil, and4.2.4. Evening Primrose Oil 1274.2.5. Flaxseed (Linseed) Oil 1284.2.6. Grapeseed Oil 1294.2.7. Hazelnut (Filbert) Oil 1294.2.8. Hemp Seed Oil 1304.2.9. Perilla Seed Oil 1304.2.10. Rice Bran Oil 1304.2.11. Walnut Oil 1314.2.12. Wheat Germ Oil 1314.2.13. Other Nut and Fruit Oils 1324.2.14. Selected Characteristics of Specialty Fruit/Seed Oils 1324.3. Commonly Used Fats from Animal and Marine Sources . . . 1334.3.1. Butter (Milk) Fat 1334.3.2. Chicken, Duck, Goose, and Turkey Fats 1344.3.3. Lard 1354.3.4. Tallow and Suet 1364.3.5. Cod Liver Oil 1364.3.6. Herring Oil 1374.3.7. Menhaden Oil 1374.3.8. Other Fish Oils 1384.3.9. Fish as a Source of Elongated Omega-3 Fatty Acids . 1394.4. Nuts – Foods High in Fat 1414.5. Physical and Chemical Characteristics of Fats and Oils 1454.6. Sources of Information on Fats and Oils: Which Ones Are Most Accurate 1494.7. Oil Presses in Antiquity 152Chapter 5 Labeling Fats and Oils for the Marketplace · ·. 1535.1. An Example of Fats and Oils Labeling in the Days of Mark Twain5.2. Labeling of Fats and Oils During the Past Three Decades 5.3. Substitution for Tropical Oils5.4. Replacement of Coconut and Palm Kernel Oils by Other Oils5.4.1. Means More Calories for Consumers5.5. A History of the New Label from 1990 to 1999 1695.6. FDA Proposes New Rules for Trans Fatty Acids in5.6.1. Nutrition Labeling, Nutrient Content Claims, And Health Claims 1735.7. Labeling Regulations Regarding Foods for Children 176Chapter 6 An Overview of Dietary Fat Intake Recommendations 1776.1. How Sound Is the Advice Currently Being Given to the Public? ·. 1776.2. What Have “Experts” Been Recommending? 1776.3. Food Industry Influence 1786.4. Dietary Fat Intake Recommendations in the 1930s 1796.5. The Current U.S. Government-Sponsored Dietary Fat Intake Recommendations 1806.6. USDA Pyramid 1806.7. Current Canadian Dietary Fat Recommendations 1816.8. Future Dietary Fat Recommendations 181Chapter 7 Small Summaries of Fat Facts 1857.1. Summarizing Some Important Fat Facts 1857.2. Some Important Cholesterol Facts 1867.3. What About Fat and Heart Disease? 1877.4. What About Fat and Weight Gain and/or Loss? 1887.5. What Constitutes a Low Fat, Medium Fat, or High Fat Diet? 1887.6. What Happens When You Include Coconut Oil in a Phase I7.6.1. National Cholesterol Education Program Diet? 1897.7. What About Dietary Fat and Children? 1897.8. Why is There So Much Lactation Failure Today? 1907.9. Are We Eating Too Much Fat? 1907.10. Miscellaneous Fat Facts 1907.11. What Are You to Believe? 1917.12. A Mini-Glossary of Food Fats and Oils 1937.13. Typical Natural “Saturated” Animal Fats 1937.14. Typical Natural “Saturated” Vegetable Fats 1937.15. Mostly Omega-9 ” Monounsaturated” Animal Fats 1947.16. Mostly Omega-9 “Monounsaturated” Vegetable Fats 1957.17. Mostly Omega-9 “Monounsaturated” With Some Omega-6 and Omega-3 Vegetable Fats 1957.18. Mostly Omega-3 “Polyunsaturated” Vegetable Fats 1967.19. Mostly Omega-6 With Some Omega-3 Vegetable Fats 1967.20. Regular Omega-6 Vegetable Fats 1967.21. Nearly Equal Omega-9 and Omega-6 Vegetable Fats 1977.22. How Should Fats and Oils Be Used? 1977.23. Some Personal Preferences 197Chapter 8 Frequently Asked Questions and Their Answers . . . 1998.1. Questions from Consumers Regarding Foods and Trans Fatty Acids 1998.2. Questions Regarding Partial Hydrogenation 2028.3. Questions Regarding Partial Hydrogenation and Health Issues 2048.4. Questions Regarding Fatty Acid Composition of Foods 2058.5. Questions Regarding Omega-3 and Omega-6 Fatty Acids 2068.6. Questions Regarding Saturated Fat 2098.7. Questions Regarding Coconut Oil 2118.8. Questions from High School and College Students Who Had Projects or Talks to Give and Who Asked for Help 2158.9. Questions from University Faculty and Researchers 2258.10. Questions from Health Professionals; Nutritionists, Dietitians, Physicians and Other Clinicians 2278.11. Some General Questions 2318.12. Exchange in 1999 with a European-Based Journalist 233Appendix A: General Glossary 237Appendix B: Table of Acronyms 275Appendix C: Fat Composition of Common Foods 279Appendix D: Tables of Fatty Acid Sources and Nomenclature 293Chapter Notes 305Index 13About the Author 333FiguresChapter 11.1 Basic Bond Geometry 131.2 Triglyceride Structure in 2-D and 3-D 151.3 Various Triglyceride Molecules in 3-D Presentation 161.4 Melting Characteristics of Fats and Oils 181.5 Partial Hydrogenation 221.6 Classification of Fats and Oils 241.7 Omega-9 Fatty Acid Family 261.8 Omega-7 Fatty Acid Family 271.9 Omega-6 Fatty Acid Family 281.10 Omega-3 Fatty Acid Family 291.11 Common Fatty Acid Structures: Saturates 321.12 Common Fatty Acid Structures: Unsaturates 34-351.13 Fats and Oils Whose Major Fatty Acid is Oleic Acid 371.14 Common trans Fatty Acid Structures 411.15 Sucrose Polyester Molecule and Triglyceride Molecule 481.16 Animal and Plant Sterols 49Chapter 22.1 Outline of Digestive and metabolic Pathways 522.2 Digestive Pathways – Where Things Happen 532.3 metabolic Pathway Cartoon for Fat Syntihesis 542.4 metabolic Pathway Cartoon for Lipid Synthesis 542.5 Typical Cell 592.6 Lipid Bilayer Cartoon 602.7 Phospholipid Molecules 61-632.8 Prostaglandin Pathways 682.9 Cholesterol to Hormone Pathways 692.10 Characteristics of Lipoproteins 702.11 Alternative Causes of CHD 79Chapter 33.1 Sources of Fats and Oils in the United States 1890 vs 1990 903.2 Total Fat, Animal Fat, Vegetable Fat 943.3 Categories of Dietary Fat 1909 to 1990 953.4 Coconut Oil Advertisement 1896 963.5 Cooking Fat Advertisement 1896 973.6 Appropriate Levels of Dietary Fat for Infants and Children . . 110Chapter 44.1 Categories of Nuts (Percent Fat) 142Chapter 55.1a Example of Typical Mislabeling of Fat Components 1585.1b Mislabeling of Fat Contents 159-1605.1c Mislabeling of Fat Contents 161-1625.2 Example of Hypothetical Fat Labeling for Corn Chips Made with Unhydrogenated Corn Oil 1635.3 Example of Hypothetical Fat Labeling of Typical Tortilla Chips Made with Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil 1645.4 Example of How Tortilla Chips Made with Unhydrogenated Peanut Oil Could be Labeled 1655.5 Example of Ingredient Misbranding by CSPI 167TablesChapter 33.1 Dietary Fat Intake Data 1930 to 1985 933.2 Dietary Exposure to Trans Fatty Acids 1033.3 The Essential Fatty Acid (EFA) a-Linolenic Acid (Omega-3) (od-3) 1063.4 The Fish Oil Omega-3 (oo-3) EPA and DHA 1063.5 The Essential Fatty Acid (EFA) Linoleic Acid Omega-6 (a>-6) 1073.6 Conditionally Essential Gamma Linolenic Acid (GLA) (-6) 108Chapter 44.1-a Low Fat Fin Fish4.1-b Medium Fat Fin Fish4.1-c Higher Fat Fin Fish4.2 Tropical Nut Oils4.3 Fat and Fatty Acid Composition of Commonly Consumed Nuts/Seeds (weight percent) · ·. 143-1444.4 Physical Characteristics of Fats and Oils …1464.5 Ranges of Iodine Values and Saponification Values for Commonly Used Vegetable Fats and Oils 147Chapter 55.1 Composition Comparisons 155Appendix CDairy Food 280Natural Cheeses 280-282Commonly Used Fruit/Seed Oils 282-283Less Commonly Used Fruit/Seed Oils 284Commonly Used Fats from Animal and Marine Sources 284Domestic Meats 285Organ Meats 286Domestic Poultry 286Poultry Livers 287Common Game 287Variety Meats 287-288Low Fat Fin Fish 288Medium Fat Fin Fish 288-289Higher Fat Fin Fish 289-290Fish Eggs 290Crustaceans and Mollusks 290-291Popular Seeds 291Popular Nuts 291Nut Butters 292Vegetables and Beans 292Appendix DD.1 Composition of Fats And Oils: Fatty Acid Classes in Food Fats Ranked by Long-chain Saturates 294D.2 Composition And Sources of The Most Common Dietary Fatty Acids 296D.3 Fatty Acid Nomenclature: Common, Systematic, and Shorthand Names; Molecular Weights of The Most Common Dietary Fatty Acids 300D.4 Melting Points of the Most Common Fatty Acids 303D.5 Selected WebSites 304CreditsPhotographs and GraphicsCover; pages 113,126: Bethesda PressChemical Structures: Author (MGE)IllustrationsFigures 2.2,2.3,2.4, page 133: Eric B. Nicholson 1982 from The Many Rolesof Fat in Our Lives booklet by Mary G. Enig and Beverly R. Teter, ©1983
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