A controversial editorial is making some bold claims about saturated fat.
Recently published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, Aseem Malhotra, Rita Redberg and Pascal Meier, cardiologists from institutions in the U.K., California and Switzerland, claim saturated fats do not clog arteries.
“Despite popular belief among doctors and the public, the conceptual model of dietary saturated fat clogging a pipe is just plain wrong,” the authors stated.
Examining a meta-analysis of observational studies, they concluded that saturated fat was not associated with coronary heart disease, mortality, ischaemic stroke or Type 2 diabetes in healthy adults.“This idea that dietary saturated fats build up in the coronary arteries is complete unscientific nonsense,” Malhotra, cardiologist at Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust in England, told CNN.“Coronary artery disease is a chronic inflammatory condition.”
Manuel Arango, director of health policy and advocacy at the Heart and Stroke Foundation, says the average Canadian’s eating habits have changed — and not for the better.
Canadians spend more money on processed foods and less on natural ones. Food marketing has also confused consumers into buying low-fat products, he says, which can be filled with hidden fats, sugar and sodium.
“Although the health effects of saturated fats are complex and new evidence is emerging, we do know that saturated fats raise LDL cholesterol in the blood, a risk factor for heart disease and stroke,” Arango tells Global News.
“At the same time, studies have shown that replacing saturated fats with plant oils and unsaturated fats have improved cholesterol levels and reduced the risk of cardiovascular disease.”
Saturated fats are fat molecules found in animal products, dairy products, and some plant-based and vegetable oils, Arango says.
Research suggests it is not just the fat itself, but the type of food the fat is found in that can be harmful, he says. Highly processed foods, for example, are a major source of saturated fat and are also often loaded with calories, sodium, sugar and trans fats.
“It is the saturated fat found in fried and highly processed foods that is of concern,” he says.
But when it comes to putting a limit on consumption of these foods, he says the foundation doesn’t have a hard number.
“The evidence for saturated fat consumption and effects on health is not sufficiently clear to allow us to identify a limit. As well, there are different dietary saturated fatty acids and there is emerging evidence to suggest that the health effects of saturated fats could vary depending on the food sources in which they are found.”
Montreal-based registered dietitian Lisa Rutledge says not all saturated fats have the same effect on our health.
“The saturated fats in dairy, for example, may not have the same effect as saturated fats from meat products,” she tells Global News. “This new information proves once again that the oversimplified myth that there are ‘good’ and ‘bad’ foods and/or nutrients is wrong. It’s much more complicated.”