ON COCONUT OIL AND THE AHA: RESPONSE BY MARY NEWPORT MD TO THE
AHA ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON DIETARY FATS AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
The media has irresponsibly taken viral a fragment of
information purporting that coconut oil may be bad for your heart from an
article published in the medical journal "Circulation" 2017,
135:e1-24, as a presidential advisory committee report from the AHA,
"Dietary Fats and Cardiovascular Disease". The coconut oil industry
on the other side of the world, mainly comprised of small farmers who grow and
sell their coconuts, is reeling from the effects of this latest careless media
campaign. They have only recently been recovering from the previous advisory
put forth by the AHA.
There are some serious problems with the conclusions of the
advisory committee. The four "core studies" this committee relied on
were all conducted in the 1950s, were relatively small groups of "men
only" in three of the four studies, were conducted in populations that
almost certainly were not consuming coconut oil on any regular basis, and were
studies comparing diets with ANIMAL saturated fats to diets with
polyunsaturated fats. Animal and human fat is well known to store hormones,
pesticides, antibiotics and other environmental substances, which could be
factors in heart disease, whereas vegetable fats such as coconut oil would not
be so likely to contain these potentially harmful substances.
The authors do not mention whether age and smoking were
controlled for in these studies; smoking, which was very prevalent in the 1950s
compared to the 2010's is a major contributor to heart disease. The raw numbers
of how many people in each group had cardiac events was not presented, making
the summaries difficult to evaluate. The clincher in this article is that they
state on page e13, under the section on coconut oil, "Clinical trials that
compared direct effects on CVD [cardiovascular disease] of coconut oil and
other dietary oils have not been reported." They rely on studies of
individual saturated fatty acids that show a miniscule increase in LDL (so
called "bad") cholesterol but rationalize away a similar small
increase in HDL (so called "good") cholesterol and an improved LDL to
HDL ratio. For example, lauric acid (50% of coconut oil) resulted in a less
than 1 mg/dl point increase in both LDL and HDL cholesterol, with typical LDL
values ranging from less than 100 to 160 mg/dl. Could a change of less than 1
mg/dl really have that much impact?
In addition, the problem here is that natural fats such as
coconut oil and even lard do not come as individual fatty acids but rather as
combinations of many fatty acids with different properties, which may balance
each other out. Completely ignored in this report are the saturated fats in
coconut oil known as medium chain triglycerides that could balance out the
longer chain fats. Coconut oil also contains some mono- and polyunsaturated
fats, tauted as healthy by this committee. One of the most important details
that the AHA is missing here is that 70% of the saturated fats in coconut oil
are medium chain triglycerides (C6 through C12) which are either converted to
ketones or burned immediately as fuel by muscle and other organs and not stored
as fat. Lauric acid has some properties of medium chain and longer chain fatty
acids. Ketones come from breakdown of fat and provide an alternative fuel to
the brain and most other organs during starvation or fasting or to cells that
are insulin resistant. In a recent study conducted in Japan, lauric acid was
found to potently stimulate ketone production in astrocytes in cultures;
astrocytes are brain cells that nourish other brain cells. By comparison,
butter, lard and animal fat contain minimal medium chain triglycerides and
medium chains are not found in soybean, olive, corn, safflower and most other
oils. There are hundreds of studies of potential benefits of coconut oil; for
example, lauric acid, which makes up about 50% of coconut oil, is antimicrobial
- there are numerous studies showing that lauric acid kills many bacteria,
viruses, fungi like candida and protozoa. Lauric acid is not found in any
significant amount in soybean, corn, canola and olive oils.
A few small cholesterol studies looking at coconut oil were
conducted decades ago in animals or a few men over short term and used
hydrogenated coconut oil - any hydrogenated oil will increase cholesterol.
Also, the diets were deficient in omega-3 fatty acids which can also increase
cholesterol levels. There are studies of entire populations for whom coconut
oil provides 1/3 to 2/3 of the diet showing that they were of normal height and
weight, had normal blood pressure, triglycerides and cholesterol levels at all
ages.
The committee surmises that people who eat saturated fats likely
have other bad eating habits without any proof. These days, many, if not most,
of the people who embrace coconut oil are likely embracing healthier foods as
well and a healthier lifestyle in general and eating fish and/or taking omega-3
fats, which weren’t on the radar in the 1950s when the so-called “core studies”
for this report were conducted.
The folks in the AHA and other organizations who perpetuate
these myths about coconut oil need to really do their homework and learn more
about medium chain triglycerides and study the other beneficial effects of
coconut oil, which they choose to ignore. The point that some people may
benefit from eating more polyunsaturated fat in place of animal fat may be very
valid. However, coconut oil is not animal fat and, nevertheless, the bottom
line that came out of their lengthy report is that “coconut oil is bad for your
heart”, which has now been perpetuated by media who jumped on this conclusion
that is not even based on direct research of coconut oil and heart disease.
This message has gone viral worldwide. The impact of this could take a
devastating toll on the economies of countries that produce coconut oil, mostly
made up of individual farmers and their families trying to make a living. These
economies were devastated in the 1960s and have been slowly recovering from the
initial similar AHA statement on saturated fats in 1961 based on the same four
“core studies". It is irresponsible and unconscionable for this advisory
committee to make such sweeping claims without direct proof that coconut oil
causes heart disease.
The AHA advisory committee should consider the negative impact
their report has already had on the communities on the other side of the world,
and issue a clarification that there is no direct proof that coconut oil has a
negative effect on the heart. Then the committee needs to figure out how to
make the clarification statement go viral.
Labels: AD, AHA, Alzheimer's, cancer and ketogenic diet, cholesterol, coconut, coconut oil, fat, heart disease, high fat diet, ketone salts, ketones, low fat diet, medium chain triglycerides, memory loss, saturated fat