|
Trans fats may cause brain damage
03/11/2004 - Foods
high in trans fats may
be damaging consumers’ brains
more than other high
fat foods, leading to memory
loss in old age and problems
performing simple jobs, according
to new animal research. Chris
Mercer reports.
Experiments with middle-aged rats, roughly equivalent in age to a 60-year-old
person, showed that after only eight weeks of eating high fat foods, those
on a high trans fat diet could not perform simple memory tasks as well as those
on a high fat diet of soybean oil.
The study was carried out by scientists
at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), including
the university’s
director of the Center on Aging, Anne-Charlotte Granholm,
who sees this work as another nail in the coffin for trans
fats, one of the new ‘evils’ of food processing.
The group compared rats on a high fat
diet of 12 per cent soybean oil with those on a high fat
diet of 10 per cent trans fats and two per cent cholesterol.
In one experiment, the rodents, all of a similar weight,
had to recall the location of hidden platforms in a water-filled
maze – a task
the trans fat rats were around five times
worse at.
A range of studies have already shown that high fat/ high
cholesterol diets could contribute to learning and memory
difficulties in the brain, but the MUSC research appears to
highlight trans fats as the biggest single offenders.
Granholm said that while “it
is always difficult to draw comparisons between animal
studies and humans,” the
study was nevertheless “quite alarming”.
She believes food companies should show greater responsibility
by cutting levels of trans fats in products more quickly.
The MUSC research is another kick in
the teeth for trans fats, the common name for hydrogenated
fats and oils, which are already thought to significantly
increase the risk of heart disease by blocking arteries
and have also been linked to a higher risk of Alzheimer’s
disease.
Hydrogenated fats and oils have been widely used in the
food industry for the last 50 years, primarily to extend the
shelf life of products because trans fats do not go rancid
as quickly as unsaturated fats. The high melting point and
solid nature of hydrogenated fat also helps industrial bakers
to maintain structure in their breads.
A number of companies have made commitments
to reduce trans fats in their products, prompted by governmental
and medical concerns. In the US, Kraft foods has launched
trans fat free Oreo biscuits and PepsiCo now produces trans
fat free Doritos through subsidiary Frito-Lay. In Europe,
United Biscuits’ unit
McVities has removed trans fats from
its biscuit dough, though not cream filling, and UK retailer
Sainsbury now claims to use low trans fat pastry.
Some alternatives to trans fats have
also begun to appear, such as Danish company Danisco’s new emulsifier/oil
blends and US firm Dow Agrosciences’ natural Natreon
canola oil, which claim to fill the role
of partially hydrogenated fat.
But MUSC study author Granholm said that trans fats should
be removed even before alternatives have been perfected: “Trans
fats have only been around since the
Second World War and before that we obviously did fine without
them.
“What will happen is that people
will have to adjust their lives a little. For example,
buying a loaf of bread and having it last for a month
or more without freezing it may no longer be an option.
In fact, most European countries live by that.”
Granholm said that the next step for
herself and her colleagues would be to investigate the exact
process by which trans fats affect the brain, and examine
further the difference between cholesterol, saturated fats
and trans fats in terms of the possible detrimental effects
on people. She admitted that the group’s studies needed
to be followed up by “careful
examination of the human body” to gain greater credence.
By January 2006 all manufacturers operating
in the US will have to label trans fat content on their
products, according to a recent ruling by the country’s
Food and Drug Administration.
In the UK, the government’s Food Standards Agency has
been slower to react to a threat from trans fats, warning people
to consume less but concentrating its efforts on reducing salt
and saturated fat levels in foods. Industry association the
Food and Drink Federation said that government figures showed
peoples’ trans fat intake had halved between 1985 and
2000.
This original article can be found at:
http://www.bakeryandsnacks.com/news/ng-nocache.asp?id=55845
Back
to News Summary
|