Press and scientific information relating to Coconut
Womans World - Columbia University Flat Belly Study
Get ready to get rid of the jiggle in your middle! Columbia University
scientists have new proof that a simple kitchen
trick can supercharge ordinary
diets, helping dieters burn two times more weight, and seven times
more belly fat.
Read
more (PDF) ...
Protect your heart with coconut oil? Yes, believe it or not, coconut
oil may be one of the best foods for your heart.
Once mistakenly believed to be bad for the heart because of its
saturated fat content, coconut oil is now known to contain a unique
form of saturated fat that actually helps prevent heart disease,
stroke, and hardening of the arteries as well as provide many other
health benefits.
Read more ...
The Great Fat Debate - Why Virgin Coconut Oil Is Best
By NewsTarget.com
There is so much media hype from the mainstream media and leading health authorities, including the naturopathic community, suggesting the many ill effects of consuming Trans Fatty Acids (TFA’s) that the topic of the Great Fat Debate deserves a closer look for the sake of our heath and understanding.
Whilst there is unanimous agreement that TFA’s are problematic and are to be avoided at all costs, some explanations are confusing at best or misleading at worst. It is time for more clarity so we can all choose the fats that are good and avoid those that are bad.
Let’s look at some of these warnings:
Read more ...
Coconut Oil in Health and Disease: ITS and Monolaurin's Potential as
Cure for HIV/AIDS
By Dr. Conrado S. Dayrit
ABSTRACT
The coconut is called the tree of life for it has been providing us,
humans, food and drink, materials for housing, fuel and many
industrial uses. And its medicinal uses are many and varied. The
latest medical potential of products of the coconut first identified
by Jon Kabara and others in the 70s, is the anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-fungal activity of its medium chain fatty acids,
particularly lauric acid (C12:0) in its monoglyceride form
(monolaurin or ML).
The first clinical trial ever of ML was on 15 HIV-infected patients
reporting regularly at the San Lazaro Hospital, Manila who, never
having received any anti-HIV medication, were randomly assigned to 3
treatment groups: 7.2 g ML, 2.4 g ML and 50 ML of coconut oil daily
for 6 months.
Original story has been deleted from this web site
Dr Ray Peat on Coconut Oil
By Dr Ray Peat
This is a slightly modified version of Ray Peat's article which
can be found here.
I have already discussed the many toxic effects of the unsaturated
oils, and I have frequently mentioned that coconut oil doesn't have
those toxic effects, though it does contain a small amount of the
unsaturated oils.
Many people have asked me to write something on coconut oil. I
thought I might write a small book on it, but I realize that there
are no suitable channels for distributing such a book — if the seed-oil
industry can eliminate major corporate food products that have used
coconut oil for a hundred years, they certainly have the power to
prevent dealers from selling a book that would affect their market
more seriously. For the present, I will just outline some of the
virtues of coconut oil.
The unsaturated oils in some cooked foods become rancid in just
a few hours, even at refrigerator temperatures, and are responsible
for the stale taste of leftover foods. (Eating slightly stale food
isn't particularly harmful, since the same oils, even when eaten
absolutely fresh, will oxidize at a much higher rate once they are
in the body, where they are heated and thoroughly mixed with an abundance
of oxygen.)
Coconut oil that has been kept at room temperature for a year has
been tested for rancidity, and showed no evidence of it.
Since we would expect the small percentage of unsaturated oils
naturally contained in coconut oil to become rancid, it seems that
the other (saturated) oils have an antioxidative effect:
I suspect that the dilution keeps the unstable unsaturated fat
molecules spatially separated from each other, so they can't interact
in the destructive chain reactions that occur in other oils.
To interrupt chain-reactions of oxidation is one of the functions
of antioxidants, and it is possible that a sufficient quantity of
coconut oil in the body has this function. It is well established
that dietary coconut oil reduces our need for vitamin E, but I think
its antioxidant role is more general than that, and that it has both
direct and indirect antioxidant activities.
Coconut oil is unusually rich in short and medium chain fatty acids.
Shorter chain length allows fatty acids to be metabolized without
use of the carnitine transport system. Mildronate protects cells
against stress partly by opposing the action of carnitine, and comparative
studies showed that added carnitine had the opposite effect, promoting
the oxidation of unsaturated fats during stress, and increasing oxidative
damage to cells.
I suspect that a degree of saturation of the oxidative apparatus
by short-chain fatty acids has a similar effect — that is, that
these very soluble and mobile short-chain saturated fats have priority
for oxidation, because they don't require carnitine transport into
the mitochondrion, and that this will tend to inhibit oxidation of
the unstable, peroxidizable unsaturated fatty acids.
When Albert Schweitzer operated his clinic in tropical Africa,
he said it was many years before he saw any cases of cancer, and
he believed that the appearance of cancer was caused by the change
to the European type of diet. In the l920s, German researchers showed
that mice on a fat-free diet were practically free of cancer.
Since then, many studies have demonstrated a very close association
between consumption of unsaturated oils and the incidence of cancer.
Heart damage is easily produced in animals by feeding them linoleic
acid; this "essential" fatty acid turned out to be the heart toxin
in rape-seed oil.
The addition of saturated fat to the experimental heart-toxic
oil-rich diet protects against the damage to heart cells.
Immunosuppression was observed in patients who were being "nourished" by
intravenous emulsions of "essential fatty acids," and as a result
coconut oil is used as the basis for intravenous fat feeding, except
in organ-transplant patients. For those patients, emulsions of unsaturated
oils are used specifically for their immunosuppressive effects.
General aging, and especially aging of the brain, is increasingly
seen as being closely associated with lipid peroxidation.
Several years ago I met an old couple, who were only a few years
apart in age, but the wife looked many years younger than her doddering
old husband. She was from the Philippines, and she remarked that
she always had to cook two meals at the same time, because her husband
couldn't adapt to her traditional food. Three times every day, she
still prepared her food in coconut oil. Her apparent youth increased
my interest in the effects of coconut oil.
In the l960s, Hartroft and Porta gave an elegant argument for decreasing
the ratio of unsaturated oil to saturated oil in the diet (and thus
in the tissues). They showed that the "age pigment" is produced in
proportion to the ratio of oxidants to antioxidants, multiplied by
the ratio of unsaturated oils to saturated oils.
More recently, a variety of studies have demonstrated that ultraviolet
light induces peroxidation in unsaturated fats, but not saturated
fats, and that this occurs in the skin as well as in the lab.
Rabbit experiments, and studies of humans, showed that the amount
of unsaturated oil in the diet strongly affects the rate at which
aged, wrinkled skin develops.
The unsaturated fat in the skin is a major target for the aging
and carcinogenic effects of ultraviolet light, though not necessarily
the only one.
In the l940s, farmers attempted to use cheap coconut oil for fattening
their animals, but they found that it made them lean, active and
hungry. For a few years, an antithyroid drug was found to make the
livestock get fat while eating less food, but then it was found to
be a strong carcinogen, and it also probably produced hypothyroidism
in the people who ate the meat.
By the late l940s, it was found that the same antithyroid effect,
causing animals to get fat without eating much food, could be achieved
by using soy beans and corn as feed.
Later, an animal experiment fed diets that were low or high in
total fat, and in different groups the fat was provided by pure coconut
oil, or a pure unsaturated oil, or by various mixtures of the two
oils. At the end of their lives, the animals' obesity increased directly
in proportion to the ratio of unsaturated oil to coconut oil in their
diet, and was not related to the total amount of fat they had consumed.
That is, animals which ate just a little pure unsaturated oil
were fat, and animals which ate a lot of coconut oil were lean.
G. W. Crile and his wife found that the metabolic rate of people
in Yucatan, where coconut is a staple food, averaged 25% higher
than that of people in the United States.
In a hot climate, the adaptive tendency is to have a lower metabolic
rate, so it is clear that some factor is more than offsetting this
expected effect of high environmental temperatures. The people there
are lean, and recently it has been observed that the women there
have none of the symptoms we commonly associate with the menopause.
By l950, then, it was established that unsaturated fats suppress
the metabolic rate, apparently creating hypothyroidism.
Over the next few decades, the exact mechanisms of that metabolic
damage were studied. Unsaturated fats damage the mitochondria, partly
by suppressing the reparatory enzyme, and partly by causing generalized
oxidative damage. The more unsaturated the oils are, the more specifically
they suppress tissue response to thyroid hormone, and transport of
the hormone on the thyroid transport protein.
Plants evolved a variety of toxins designed to protect themselves
from "predators," such as grazing animals. Seeds contain a variety
of toxins, that seem to be specific for mammalian enzymes, and the
seed oils themselves function to block protein digestive enzymes
in the stomach.
The thyroid hormone is formed in the gland by the action of a
protein digestive enzyme, and the unsaturated oils also inhibit that
enzyme. Similar protein digestive enzymes involved in clot removal
and immune function appear to be similarly inhibited by these oils.
Just as metabolism is "activated" by consumption of coconut oil,
which prevents the inhibiting effect of unsaturated oils, other inhibited
processes, such as clot removal and immune function, will probably
tend to be restored by continuing use of coconut oil.
Brain tissue is very rich in complex forms of fats.
The experiment (around 1978) in which pregnant mice were given
diets containing either coconut oil or unsaturated oil showed that
brain development was superior in the young mice whose mothers ate
coconut oil.
Because coconut oil supports thyroid function, and thyroid governs
brain development, including myelination, the result might simply
reflect the difference between normal and hypothyroid individuals.
However, in 1980, experimenters demonstrated that young rats fed
milk containing soy oil incorporated the oil directly into their
brain cells, and had structurally abnormal brain cells as a result.
Lipid oxidation occurs during seizures, and antioxidants such
as vitamin E have some anti-seizure activity. Currently, lipid oxidation
is being found to be involved in the nerve cell degeneration of Alzheimer's
disease.
Various fractions of coconut oil are coming into use as "drugs," meaning
that they are advertised as treatments for diseases. Butyric acid
is used to treat cancer, lauric and myristic acids to treat virus
infections, and mixtures of medium-chain fats are sold for weight
loss.
Purification undoubtedly increases certain effects, and results
in profitable products, but in the absence of more precise knowledge,
I think the whole natural product, used as a regular food, is the
best way to protect health.
The shorter-chain fatty acids have strong, unpleasant odors; for
a couple of days after I ate a small amount of a medium-chain triglyceride
mixture, my skin oil emitted a rank, goaty smell. Some people don't
seem to have that reaction, and the benefits might outweigh the stink,
but these things just haven't been in use long enough to know whether
they are safe.
Treating any complex natural product as the drug industry does,
as a raw material to be fractionated in the search for "drug" products,
is risky, because the relevant knowledge isn't sought in the search
for an association between a single chemical and a single disease.
While the toxic unsaturated paint-stock oils, especially safflower,
soy, corn and linseed (flaxseed) oils, have been sold to the public
precisely for their drug effects, all of their claimed benefits were
false.
When people become interested in coconut oil as a "health food," the
huge seed-oil industry — operating through their shills — are going
to attack it as an "unproved drug."
While components of coconut oil have been found to have remarkable
physiological effects (as antihistamines, antiinfectives/antiseptics,
promoters of immunity, glucocorticoid antagonist, nontoxic anticancer
agents, for example).
The cholesterol-lowering fiasco for a long time centered on the
ability of unsaturated oils to slightly lower serum cholesterol.
For years, the mechanism of that action wasn't known, which should
have suggested caution. Now, it seems that the effect is just one
more toxic action, in which the liver defensively retains its cholesterol,
rather than releasing it into the blood.
Large scale human studies have provided overwhelming evidence
that whenever drugs, including the unsaturated oils, were used to
lower serum cholesterol, mortality increased, from a variety of causes
including accidents, but mainly from cancer.
Since the l930s, it has been clearly established that suppression
of the thyroid raises serum cholesterol (while increasing mortality
from infections, cancer, and heart disease), while restoring the
thyroid hormone brings cholesterol down to normal.
In this situation, however, thyroid isn't suppressing the synthesis
of cholesterol, but rather is promoting its use to form hormones
and bile salts. When the thyroid is functioning properly, the amount
of cholesterol in the blood entering the ovary governs the amount
of progesterone being produced by the ovary, and the same situation
exists in all steroid-forming tissues, such as the adrenal glands
and the brain.
Progesterone and its precursor, pregnenolone, have a generalized
protective function: antioxidant, anti-seizure, antitoxin, anti-spasm,
anti-clot, anticancer, pro-memory, pro-myelination, pro-attention,
etc. Any interference with the formation of cholesterol will interfere
with all of these exceedingly important protective functions.
As far as the evidence goes, it suggests that coconut oil, added
regularly to a balanced diet, lowers cholesterol to normal by promoting
its conversion into pregnenolone.
Coconut-eating cultures in the tropics have consistently lower
cholesterol than people in the U.S. Everyone that I know who uses
coconut oil regularly happens to have cholesterol levels of about
160, while eating mainly cholesterol rich foods (eggs, milk, cheese,
meat, shellfish). I encourage people to eat sweet fruits, rather
than starches, if they want to increase their production of cholesterol,
since fructose has that effect.
Many people see coconut oil in its hard, white state, and — as
a result of their training watching television or going to medical
school — associate it with the cholesterol-rich plaques in blood
vessels. Those lesions in blood vessels are caused mostly by lipid
oxidation of unsaturated fats, and relate to stress, because adrenaline
liberates fats from storage, and the lining of blood vessels is exposed
to high concentrations of the blood-borne material.
In the body, incidentally, the oil can't exist as a solid, since
it liquefies at 76 degrees. (Incidentally, the viscosity of complex
materials isn't a simple matter of averaging the viscosity of its
component materials; cholesterol and saturated fats sometimes lower
the viscosity of cell components.)
Most of the images and metaphors relating to coconut oil and cholesterol
that circulate in our culture are false and misleading. I offer a
counter-image, which is metaphorical, but it is true in that it relates
to lipid oxidation, which is profoundly important in our bodies.
After a bottle of safflower oil has been opened a few times, a few
drops that get smeared onto the outside of the bottle begin to get
very sticky, and hard to wash off.
This property is why it is a valued base for paints and varnishes,
but this varnish is chemically closely related to the age pigment
that forms "liver spots" on the skin, and similar lesions in the
brain, heart, blood vessels, lenses of the eyes, etc. The image of "hard,
white saturated coconut oil" isn't relevant to the oil's biological
action, but the image of "sticky varnish-like easily oxidized unsaturated
seed oils" is highly relevant to their toxicity.
The ability of some of the medium chain saturated fatty acids in
coconut oil to inhibit the liver's formation of fat very likely synergizes
with the pro-thyroid effect, in allowing energy to be used, rather
than stored.
When fat isn't formed from carbohydrate, the sugar is available
for use, or for storage as glycogen. Therefore, shifting from
unsaturated fats in foods to coconut oil involves several anti-stress
processes, reducing our need for the adrenal hormones. Decreased
blood sugar is a basic signal for the release of adrenal hormones.
Unsaturated oil tends to lower the blood sugar in at least three
basic ways.
It damages mitochondria, causing respiration to be uncoupled from
energy production, meaning that fuel is burned without useful effect.
It suppresses the activity of the respiratory enzyme (directly, and
through its anti-thyroid actions), decreasing the respiratory production
of energy.
And it tends to direct carbohydrate into fat production, making
both stress and obesity more probable. For those of us who use coconut
oil consistently, one of the most noticeable changes is the ability
to go for several hours without eating, and to feel hungry without
having symptoms of hypoglycemia.
One of the stylish ways to promote the use of unsaturated oils
is to refer to their presence in "cell membranes," and to claim that
they are essential for maintaining "membrane fluidity." As I have
mentioned above, it is the ability of the unsaturated fats, and their
breakdown products, to interfere with enzymes and transport proteins,
which accounts for many of their toxic effects, so they definitely
don't just harmlessly form "membranes."
They probably bind to all proteins, and disrupt some of them,
but for some reason their affinity for proteolytic and respiration-related
enzymes is particularly obvious. (I think the chemistry of this association
is going to give us some important insights into the nature of organisms).
Unsaturated fats are slightly more water-soluble than fully saturated
fats, and so they do have a greater tendency to concentrate at interfaces
between water and fats or proteins, but there are relatively few
places where these interfaces can be usefully and harmlessly occupied
by unsaturated fats, and at a certain point, an excess becomes harmful.
We don't want "membranes" forming where there shouldn't be membranes.
The fluidity or viscosity of cell surfaces is an extremely complex
subject, and the degree of viscosity has to be appropriate for the
function of the cell. Interestingly, in some cells, such as the cells
that line the air sacs of the lungs, cholesterol and one of the saturated
fatty acids found in coconut oil can increase the fluidity of the
cell surface.
In red blood cells, which have sometimes been wrongly described
as "hemoglobin enclosed in a cell membrane," it has been known for
a long time that lipid oxidation of unsaturated fats weakens the
cellular structure, causing the cells to be destroyed prematurely.
Lipid oxidation products lower the rigidity of regions of cells
considered to be membranes. But the red blood cell is actually more
like a sponge in structure, consisting of a "skeleton" of proteins,
which (if not damaged by oxidation) can hold its shape, even when
the hemoglobin has been removed. Oxidants damage the protein structure,
and it is this structural damage which in turn increases the "fluidity" of
the associated fats.
So, it is probably true that in many cases the liquid unsaturated
oils do increase "membrane fluidity," but it is now clear that in
at least some of those cases the "fluidity" corresponds to the chaos
of a damaged cell protein structure. (N. V. Gorbunov, "Effect of
structural modification of membrane proteins on lipid-protein interactions
in the human erythrocyte membrane," Bull. Exp. Biol. & Med. 116(11),
1364-67. 1993.
Although I had stopped using the unsaturated seed oils years ago,
and supposed that I wasn't heavily saturated with toxic unsaturated
fat, when I first used coconut oil I saw an immediate response, that
convinced me my metabolism was chronically inhibited by something
that was easily alleviated by "dilution" or molecular competition.
I had put a tablespoonful of coconut oil on some rice I had for
supper, and half an hour later while I was reading, I noticed I was
breathing more deeply than normal. I saw that my skin was pink, and
I found that my pulse was faster than normal — about 98, I think.
After an hour or two, my pulse and breathing returned to normal.
Every day for a couple of weeks I noticed the same response while
I was digesting a small amount of coconut oil, but gradually it didn't
happen any more, and I increased my daily consumption of the oil
to about an ounce. I kept eating the same foods as before, except
that I added about 200 or 250 calories per day as coconut oil.
Apparently the metabolic surges that happened at first were an
indication that my body was compensating for an anti-thyroid substance
by producing more thyroid hormone; when the coconut oil relieved
the inhibition, I experienced a moment of slight hyperthyroidism,
but after a time the inhibitor became less effective, and my body
adjusted by producing slightly less thyroid hormone.
But over the next few months, I saw that my weight was slowly
and consistently decreasing. It had been steady at 185 pounds for
25 years, but over a period of six months it dropped to about 175
pounds. I found that eating more coconut oil lowered my weight another
few pounds, and eating less caused it to increase.
The anti-obesity effect of coconut oil is clear in all of the animal
studies, and in my friends who eat it regularly.
It is now hard to get it in health food stores, since Hain stopped
selling it. The Spectrum product looks and feels a little different
to me, and I suppose the particular type of tree, region, and method
of preparation can account for variations in the consistency and
composition of the product.
The unmodified natural oil is called "76 degree melt," since that
is its natural melting temperature. One bottle from a health food
store was labeled "natural coconut oil, 92% unsaturated oil," and
it had the greasy consistency of old lard. I suspect that someone
had confused palm oil (or something worse) with coconut oil, because
it should be about 96% saturated fatty acids.
Raymond Peat, Ph.D. P.O. Box 5764 Eugene, OR 97405