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Essential Fatty Acids

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This looks like a good reference, so I am including it here. I've

read alot of articles about Omega 3 vs Omega 6. I frankly don't know

the percentage of Omega 3 in cod liver oil vs salmon oil, per ounce,

etc, but I am convinced that cod liver oil is a valuable nutrient.

 

Fran

 

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How Fats Work

 

by Marshall Brain

 

Between the 600 margarine commercials you see on TV every day and the

400 nutrition bulletins and reports you hear about on the news every

night, you get a huge amount of information about the fats that you

eat. For example, you have probably heard of the following terms:

 

Saturated fat

Unsaturated fat

Polyunsaturated fat

Mono-unsaturated fat

Fatty acids

Essential fatty acids

Trans fatty acids

Omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids

Partially hydrogenated fat

Have you ever wondered what it all means, or why it matters? Why

can't we just eat, drink and be merry? In this edition of

HowStuffWorks, you'll find out exactly what these terms mean and how

the various forms of fat you find in foods affect your body.

 

 

What is Fat?

Corn Oil

With some grains and nuts it is very easy to see where the oil comes

from. For example, if you squeeze a sesame seed or a sunflower seed

between two sheets of paper, you can see the oil. Corn isn't quite

that oily, but it does contain oil. A kernel of corn has an outer

husk surrounding a white or yellow starchy substance. At the core of

the starchy substance and toward the pointy end of the kernel is the

germ. The germ contains a small amount of oil. If you cut a popcorn

kernel in half, you can see the husk, starch and germ. If you cut out

the tiny piece of germ and squeeze the germ on a piece of paper, you

will see the oil!

We see pure fats in three places at the grocery store:

 

In the vegetable oil aisle you see oils created from different seeds

and nuts. There is corn oil, safflower oil, peanut oil, canola oil,

olive oil... All seeds and nuts contain some amount of oil, because

oil is a very good way to store energy. By the way, the only

difference between oil and fat is whether or not it is a solid at

room temperature.

 

In the meat aisle, you can look at different cuts of meat and see

them outlined by a layer of white, solid fat created by the animal to

store energy.

 

In the dairy aisle you see butter and margarine -- fat made from

cream or vegetable oils, respectively.

 

The rest of the grocery store is, of course, filled with fats and

oils, although they are less obvious. Potato chips and french fries

are cooked in oil, cookies and cakes contain fats and oils, and so

on. This is how we come to eat the fat we need every day. And we do

need fat - as you will learn below, there are certain fats that we

must have to survive.

So what are these fats and oils really made of? Well, if you really

want to understand fat you need to study a little bit of chemistry.

To talk about fat, we need to start by talking about fatty acids.

 

A fatty acid is a long hydrocarbon chain capped by a carboxyl group

(COOH). There are many common fatty acids that you hear about, four

of which are shown below along with acetic acid for comparison:

 

(picture not included here)

 

The COOH cap is what makes these molecules acids. You are probably

familiar with acetic acid because this is the acid found in vinegar.

You can see that the fatty acids are like acetic acid, but they have

much longer carbon chains.

 

To make a normal fat, you take three fatty acids and bond them

together with glycerol to form a triglyceride, like this:

 

(picture not included here)

 

Since this particular triglyceride happens to contain three molecules

of stearic acid, it is also known as tristearin. This diagram shows

one fat molecule. When you eat fat, you are eating collections of

molecules like these. The choice of the fatty acids in the fat

controls many different things about the fat, including how it looks,

whether it is a solid or a liquid at room temperature and how healthy

it is for your body.

 

 

Saturated vs. Unsaturated

If you look at palmitic acid and stearic acid in the first figure,

you can see that the carbon chains are completely and evenly filled

with hydrogen atoms. In other words, the chains are saturated with

hydrogen. Fats (triglycerides) that contain palmitic acid and stearic

acid are therefore known as saturated fats. Fats made up of saturated

fatty acids are solid at room temperature.

 

In the first figure you can see that oleic acid is not saturated. Two

of the carbons are connected by a double bond, and two of the

hydrogens are missing. This fatty acid is unsaturated. Fats that have

a lot of oleic acid in them are liquid at room temperature, and are

therefore known to us as oils.

 

Oleic acid, because it contains one double bond, is also referred to

as mono-unsaturated. Fatty acids that have multiple double bonds,

like linoleic acid in the first figure, are called polyunsaturated.

Polyunsaturated fats are also liquid at room temperature.

 

If you have a bottle of corn oil, what you have is a bottle of

polyunsaturated oil with a high concentration of linoleic acid.

Because it is polyunsaturated, it is liquid at room temperature. If

you would like to solidify it and turn it into margarine, what you do

is hydrogenate it. That is, you saturate it with hydrogen by breaking

the carbon double bonds and attaching hydrogen. To do this, you heat

the oil and add pressurized hydrogen gas and a nickel catalyst. In

this way, you create " partially hydrogenated vegetable oil. " PHVO is

the main ingredient in things like vegetable shortening and

margarine.

 

 

Fat and Health

Most of the nutrition science you hear about right now points to mono-

unsaturated fats as the good fats. Olive oil and canola oil are both

mono-unsaturated. Mono-unsaturated fats are thought to lower

cholesterol.

 

In general, the fats to steer clear of are the saturated fats.

Saturated fats are bad because they clog your arteries. Partially

hydrogenated vegetable oils (which are artificially saturated fats)

are now considered totally evil, both because of the saturation and a

side-effect of hydrogenation called trans fatty acids.

 

Fatty acids that have double bonds come in two forms: trans and

cis. " Trans " and " cis " refer to the direction of folding that occurs

at the carbon double bonds in unsaturated fatty acids. Cis fatty

acids are the normal, natural directions for the folds. A trans fatty

acid is chemically identical to the cis form, but folds in an

unnatural direction. The trans fatty acids are created by heat (as in

deep frying) and by hydrogenation.

 

It turns out that in the body, the enzymes that deal with fat are

unable to deal with the trans fatty acids (see How Cells Work for

details on enzymes). Therefore, the enzymes get tied up trying to

work on the trans fatty acids, and this can lead to problems with the

processing of essential fatty acids.

 

 

Clogged Arteries

The heart is an amazing organ. It beats thousands of times each day,

every day, for your entire life. In the process, it pumps about five

million gallons of blood through your body!

The heart is a muscle, and it needs a supply of oxygen-rich blood to

survive. Even though the heart has all of that blood flowing through

it while it is pumping, it does not use that blood for its oxygen

needs. Instead, there is a set of arteries and veins out on the

surface of the heart muscle that feed it. If one of these outer

arteries gets blocked, it causes a heart attack. A blockage like this

is normally caused by fatty deposits that build up in the heart's

arteries over the course of many years. Everything you hear about fat

in the diet, cholesterol, coronary artery disease and " clogged

arteries " is focused on this problem -- blocked heart arteries and

the heart attacks they cause are a leading killer in the United

States.

 

Essential Fatty Acids

The most common fatty acids are found in animal fats and include:

 

Palmitic acid

Stearic acid

Oleic acid

Your body is able to create these fats whenever it has a caloric

surplus. It can create them from straight sugar if there are enough

sugar calories coming in (see How Food Works for a discussion of

carbohydrates and sugar).

It turns out that there is another class of fatty acids called

essential fatty acids that your body cannot manufacture. These fatty

acids include:

 

Linoleic acid (LA) (omega-6)

Arachidonic acid (AA) (omega-6)

Gamma linolenic acid (GLA) (omega-6)

Dihomogamma linolenic acid (DGLA) (omega-6)

Alpha linolenic acid (LNA) (omega-3)

Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) (omega-3)

Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) (omega-3)

 

Because your body cannot manufacture them, they must come in from the

food you eat.

 

Essential fatty acids fall into two groups: omega-3 and omega-6. The

3 and 6 refer to the first carbon double bond position on the fatty

acid chain. All essential fatty acids are polyunsaturated, so the 3

and the 6 mean that the first double bond is either 3 or 6 carbons in

from the end.

 

Omega-6 fatty acids are everywhere: corn oil, sunflower oil and

soybean oil all contain them. Omega-3 fatty acids are harder to find.

Things like flax seeds, pumpkin seeds and walnuts are high in omega-3

fatty acids, as are salmon, trout and tuna. Current thinking is that

these two fats need to be balanced in the diet at a ratio like 1-to-1

or 2-to-1, rather than the normal 20-to-1 ratio seen in most Western

diets. About the only way to do that is to supplement your diet with

omega-3 vegetable oils or to start eating fish in a big way (meaning

two or three times a week).

 

 

So What Should I Eat?

Summarizing all of this information, the current scientific thinking

on fat consumption goes something like this:

 

Limit your fat intake to about 30 percent of the total calories you

consume. Do not try to cut fat intake altogether, because you do need

the essential fatty acids. A gram of fat has nine calories, meaning

that if you consume 2,000 calories in a day your total fat intake

should hover around (2000 * 30 percent / 9 calories/gram) 67 grams of

fat.

 

When consuming fat, try to focus on mono-unsaturated fats like olive

oil and canola oil, or on essential fatty acids.

When consuming essential fatty acids, try to balance your intake of

omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids. Do that by consuming

tuna/salmon/trout or omega-3 oils like flax seed oil.

For more information on fats, nutrition and related topics, check out

the links on the next page!

 

Related HowStuffWorks Articles:

 

How Food Works

How Fat Cells Work

How Calories Work

How Dieting Works

How Fitness Works!

How Heart Attacks and Angina Work

 

Links:

 

HealthWorld: Fats, Lipids and Oils

Essential Fatty Acids: Questions and Answers

Classification of Fatty Acids

Metabolism of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids

Triglyceride, High Density Lipoprotein, and Coronary Heart Disease

(in-depth analysis)

Blood Cholesterol: Know the Facts

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