Episode 18

Mediterranean Diet - Fats

Published on: 15th September, 2022

Mediterranean Diet - Fats

Perhaps the most important part of the Mediterranean Diet is this plant.

Olive oil is the single ingredient most associated with the Mediterranean Diet. It is the one single food substitution you can do that will improve your health immediately and have great consequences. But not all olive oil is the same.

Olive oil and your heart

There are many types of fat that you can find in your diet. Saturated fat will raise your LDL level, increasing your risk of heart disease and stroke. Olive oil, which is unsaturated, decreases the risk of heart disease.

Types of Fat

Fats are confusing. You will hear saturated, poly unsaturated, monounsaturated, and trans fats. First, we won't look at the chemical structure of fats. Second, we will look at the evidence that the food is associated with fat and how it influences our bodies. Finally, we will dismantle some bad arguments against certain fats.

Saturated Fats - it's the source, not the ingredient

Sources: butter, red meat, dairy.

What the Mediterranean Diet showed us what that the total diet mattered more than the individual ingredient. In spite of the revolutionary approach to using cohort studies with complete diets, many have insisted on pulling that apart to find out if one ingredient is "bad." For years, saturated fat was considered the "bad" part of what we ate. The American Heart Association recommended limiting saturated fat to just ten percent of what you eat.  The AHA recommended changing from saturated fat to polyunsaturated fat or monounsaturated fat. There has never been a question about olive oil, but a few concerns have been raised about some polyunsaturated fat.

But it isn't as simple as the saturated fat molecule. We don't eat pure saturated fat, it turns out we eat food containing that fat. Depending on the food, it depends on how saturated fat affects you.

Dairy and Fish vs Red Meat

Adding more fish and dairy to your diet decreases the risk of heart disease. Adding more red meat to your diet increases your risk of heart disease. This study, from the EPIC group, was impressive in its size, and its ability to factor out other issues that might increase heart disease. Once again, cohort studies show it isn't as important.

Cheese

Besides heart disease, cheese decreased the risk of dementia among a cohort of Finnish men followed for 22 years.

Perhaps the greatest snack of all time (my opinion - not science).

Another cohort study found that cheese was associated with a lower risk of pre-diabetes. Other forms of dairy products did not have this same benefit. This flies in the face of some vegans, who insist diabetes comes from saturated fat.

Finally, non-dairy cheese is not a great source of nutrients. I know my fellow vegans want to find a good alternative for cheese, but there simply isn't one.

Proving again that the whole food is greater than its parts, fish.

Fatty fish have been shown to decrease not only cardiovascular mortality, but all causes of mortality. But not fish oil.

Who doesn't love a good salmon?

Fish consumption has been associated with a lower risk of heart disease. Further, fatty fish decreases the risk of all-cause mortality.

Fatty fish contain high quantities of omega-3 fatty acids.  Our body cannot make these fats, we must get them from our diet. Here are the fish that are high in omega-3 fatty acids:

  • salmon
  • sardines
  • mackerel
  • herring
  • lake trout
  • canned light tuna

Even tilapia has some omega-3 fatty acids, in fact, it has about four times as much omega-3 fatty acids as grass-fed beef. However, tilapia has ten times less omega-3 fatty acid as salmon. Some have discouraged the consumption of tilapia, but it remains an inexpensive, sustainable type of fish. Just for reference, tilapia has the same amount of omega-3 fatty acid as cod, scallops, shrimp, and wild lobster.

Different types of Omega-3 fatty acids

There are two kinds of omega-3 fatty acids in fish — eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA).  One of the few supplements that all physicians recommend are DHA for pregnant women. This is essential to the brain of the child.

 Yes, he is a smart kid - was it genetics or the DHA his mother took during pregnancy?

Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids

  • They are anti-inflammatory
  • They are extracted with hexane
  • They are healthy
  • There is less hexane if you consumed from your diet for a year than one whiff of the gas you put into your automobile

 

Olive Oil

  • You can cook with it, this is the only oil used in cooking in most homes in Italy and Greece
  • Extra Virgin Olive oil standards are the highest from those produced in the United States
  • Over 80% of the Extra Virgin Olive oil imported is contaminated with other oils
  • The smoke point is around 400, but up to 475 F when you used "refined" olive oil
  • My favorite olive oil is from the US, but the tastiest is from Liguria in Italy (my opinion)

Olive oil, balsamic vinegar, sardines all provide elements of taste - the sour, salty, and savory, combine with bread - the sweet and you have a perfect balance.

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About the Podcast

Fork U with Dr. Terry Simpson
Learn more about what you put in your mouth.
Fork U(niversity)
Not everything you put in your mouth is good for you.

There’s a lot of medical information thrown around out there. How are you to know what information you can trust, and what’s just plain old quackery? You can’t rely on your own “google fu”. You can’t count on quality medical advice from Facebook. You need a doctor in your corner.

On each episode of Your Doctor’s Orders, Dr. Terry Simpson will cut through the clutter and noise that always seems to follow the latest medical news. He has the unique perspective of a surgeon who has spent years doing molecular virology research and as a skeptic with academic credentials. He’ll help you develop the critical thinking skills so you can recognize evidence-based medicine, busting myths along the way.

The most common medical myths are often disguised as seemingly harmless “food as medicine”. By offering their own brand of medicine via foods, These hucksters are trying to practice medicine without a license. And though they’ll claim “nutrition is not taught in medical schools”, it turns out that’s a myth too. In fact, there’s an entire medical subspecialty called Culinary Medicine, and Dr. Simpson is certified as a Culinary Medicine Specialist.

Where today's nutritional advice is the realm of hucksters, Dr. Simpson is taking it back to the realm of science.

About your host

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Terry Simpson

Dr. Terry Simpson received his undergraduate, graduate, and medical degrees from the University of Chicago where he spent several years in the Kovler Viral Oncology laboratories doing genetic engineering. Until he found he liked people more than petri dishes. Dr. Simpson, a weight loss surgeon is an advocate of culinary medicine, he believes teaching people to improve their health through their food and in their kitchen. On the other side of the world, he has been a leading advocate of changing health care to make it more "relationship based," and his efforts awarded his team the Malcolm Baldrige award for healthcare in 2018 and 2011 for the NUKA system of care in Alaska and in 2013 Dr Simpson won the National Indian Health Board Area Impact Award. A frequent contributor to media outlets discussing health related topics and advances in medicine, he is also a proud dad, husband, author, cook, and surgeon “in that order.”