It was also causing more
obesity than coconut oil, but not as much as soybean oil.
-- Soybean oil causes more
obesity than coconut oil and fructose.
«In our mouse experiments, olive oil produced essentially identical effects as Plenish — more
obesity than coconut oil, although less than conventional soybean oil — and very fatty livers, which was surprising as olive oil is typically considered to be the healthiest of all the vegetable oils,» said Poonamjot Deol, an assistant project scientist working in Sladek's lab and the co-first author of the research paper.
-- Soybean oil causes more
obesity than coconut oil and fructose.
It was also causing more
obesity than coconut oil, but not as much as soybean oil.
Not exact matches
The study builds on an earlier study by the researchers that compared soybean oil to a high fructose diet and found soybean oil causes more
obesity and diabetes
than coconut oil.
What the researchers found was that mice fed a diet with either of the soybean oils had worse fatty liver, glucose intolerance and
obesity than the group that got all their fat from
coconut oil.
The July, 2015 study, Soybean Oil Is More Obesogenic and Diabetogenic
than Coconut Oil and Fructose in Mouse: Potential Role for the Liver, is believed to be the first side - by - side study looking at the impact 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.
Thus this post introduces a shocker to most, that what has been touted as healthy, vegetable oil, is not healthy as it contains soybean oil which caused more
obesity and diabetes
than a diet high in fructose or
coconut oil, at least in mice.
According to a double - blind, placebo - controlled, randomized 2009 study out of Brazil, women with clinical abdominal
obesity (waist circumference of more
than 88 cm) who used
coconut oil daily for 12 weeks — in conjunction with a balanced, low - calorie diet and moderate exercise program — enjoyed a statistically greater reduction in waist circumference
than those women taking soybean oil.
-- Ted Kyle, RPh, MBA, Founder and Principal ConscienHealth, Chair of the
Obesity Action Coalition Perfect for foodies, bakers, carb counters, parents, chefs, and clinicians, this delightfully readable book features more
than 180 alphabetical entries on natural and artificial sweeteners, including the usual suspects (table sugar, honey), the controversial (aspartame, high - fructose corn syrup), the hyped (
coconut sugar, monk fruit sweetener), and the unfamiliar (Chinese rock sugar, isomaltulose).