The Scourge of Soybean Oil
Explore an unsettling revelation as emerging research connects a popular culinary oil to a host of chronic diseases, raising critical questions about the transparency and safety of our food sources.
STORY AT-A-GLANCE
Soybean oil, the most commonly used oil in the U.S., contains high levels of omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids
Polyunsaturated fats in soybean oil break down into harmful free radicals and aldehydes during high-temperature processing
Studies associate high polyunsaturated oil consumption with cancer, while saturated fats may offer protection
Soybean oil affects the hypothalamus, disrupting over 100 genes, including those regulating body weight and hormone production. A 2015 study showed mice on a high soybean oil diet had increased weight gain, diabetes, and liver abnormalities
To avoid soybean oil, switch to traditional fats like butter, lard, coconut oil, and olive oil, and avoid processed foods
Southern Maryland, where I live, used to be a premier tobacco-growing region. Then in the 1980s, as the risks of tobacco smoking became clear, the state of Maryland instituted a tobacco buy-out program. Tobacco farmers received a large payment for ten years in a row to never plant tobacco again.
The problem is that what replaced the tobacco was mostly soybeans — a crop that is far more carcinogenic and dangerous than tobacco. Fields-of-lung-cancer became fields-of-every-kind-of-cancer.
Soybean Oil Can Fuel Cancer
The most commonly used oil in the U.S. is soybean oil. Soybean oil is highly unsaturated, meaning that it contains mostly omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids along with about 10% omega-3 fatty acids. (Only canola oil contains such high levels of omega-3 fatty acids; other fats and oils contain only a small fraction.)
These types of fat molecules break down into highly reactive free radicals and aldehydes during high-temperature processing, and even further during high-temperature frying — the omega-6s certainly do but even more so the very fragile omega-3s.
It’s a well-kept secret that many studies associate the consumption of high levels of polyunsaturated oils with cancer; other studies show that saturated fats, as in coconut oil, butter, lard and tallow — the kind of healthy fats that soybean oil replaced — protect us against cancer.
All industrially processed oils are carcinogenic, especially soybean oil. But there’s a lot more that’s wrong with this ubiquitous food ingredient. Soybean oil also messes with your mind.
Health Effects of Soybean Oil Diets
In 2015, researchers at the University of California at Riverside compared mice on four different diets of equal calories: a diet high in coconut oil; a diet high in soybean oil; the coconut oil diet plus high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS); and the soybean oil diet plus HFCS.1
Those mice who received diets high in soybean oil, with and without HFCS, had increases in weight gain, adiposity, diabetes, glucose intolerance and insulin resistance. They also developed abnormalities in the liver, including fatty liver. Those mice on diets high in coconut oil in general did not develop these problems.
Two years later the researchers repeated the study using soybean oil genetically modified to contain lower amounts of polyunsaturates.2 This oil also induced obesity and other problems in the mice, but not as greatly as the original soybean oil.
These results point to polyunsaturates — and not high-fructose corn syrup — as the major culprit in the current epidemic of obesity and diabetes.
In January 2020, the research team published more bad news. Not only does soybean oil cause metabolic diseases like diabetes, but also contributes to genetic changes in the brain that could lead to conditions like anxiety and Alzheimer’s disease — both the conventional soybean oil and the modified soybean oil had the same effect.3
Soybean Oil Has Pronounced Effect on Your Master Gland
Most seriously, the researchers found that soybean oil had a pronounced effect on the hypothalamus. The hypothalamus is the body’s master gland; it regulates body weight, maintains body temperature, directs the formation of sex hormones, is critical for physical growth, and modulates our response to stress. Soybean oil caused the dysregulation of about one hundred genes in this organ.
For example, in soybean oil-fed mice, the levels of oxytocin in the hypothalamus went down. Oxytocin is the “love” or “cuddling” hormone that plays a role in social bonding, sexual reproduction, childbirth and the period after childbirth.
Oxytocin stimulates milk production and helps mothers bond with their babies. Apart from childbirth, oxytocin seems to play a role in reducing fear and anxiety in both sexes and even in protecting us from addictive behaviors.
I’ve often said that the hypothalamus is the seat of impulse control, and if there is anything that characterizes today’s generation of children, brought up on vegetable oils instead of butter and lard, it is lack of impulse control.
In addition, various structures in the hypothalamus appear to be related to gender expression, sexual orientation and gender confusion such as transsexuality.4
The formation of these structures begins in utero and continues through childhood and puberty. Is soybean oil a culprit in the tragic situation so many young people find themselves in today — feeling like they are the wrong sex for their body? If soybean oil affects the expression of dozens of genes in the hypothalamus, the likelihood is yes.
Soybean Oil Found in Most Processed Foods
There are a lot of harmful things in modern diets — refined sweeteners (sugar, high-fructose corn syrup), MSG and artificial flavors, pasteurized and homogenized milk, modified food starch, extruded grains (breakfast cereals), glyphosate and other agricultural chemicals, etc. — but by far the worst are the industrially processed seed oils, especially soybean oil.
And soybean oil is in everything! Margarine and spreads; Cool Whip, creamers and mayonnaise; salad dressings and dips; chips, crackers and snack foods; bread, donuts, cake (especially the icing) and pastries; French fries and fried chicken; and prepared foods like pizza.
The only way to avoid it is to avoid processed foods and return to the healthy fats of our ancestors — mostly animal fats (butter, lard, duck fat, tallow, etc.), plus traditional oils like coconut oil and olive oil.
Soybean Waste
By the way, what’s left after pressing soybean oil out of the seed is a high-protein gunk, which food processors manipulate and refine in order to remove the protein — resulting in products like soy protein isolate and soy protein concentrate.
These waste products are then used in a myriad of highly processed foods such as soy protein smoothies, energy bars and fake meat like the Impossible Burger. Do not for a moment believe that the corporations selling these “plant-based” foods as good for your health and good for the planet have any other motive than making a profit off a cheap waste product.
How to Rid Your Diet of Soybean Oil
If you’ve been eating the standard American diet of processed foods, getting off the vegetable oil can be a daunting challenge. Here is a list of the changes you can make (some easy, some a little harder) as first steps in regaining your health. Even if you only do some of these changes, your body will thank you!
The Weston A. Price Foundation has been warning the public about the dangers of industrial seed oils since its inception, twenty years ago. Your membership supports this important work.
About the Author
Sally Fallon Morell is author of the best-selling cookbook “Nourishing Traditions” and many other books on diet and health. She is the founding president of the Weston A. Price Foundation (westonaprice.org) and a founder of A Campaign for Real Milk (realmilk.com). Visit her blog at nourishingtraditions.com.
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Soybean oil consumption has been linked to obesity and diabetes and potentially autism, Alzheimer's disease, anxiety and depression. Let us now add to this growing list ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease or inflammatory bowel disease.
Researchers at the University of California, Riverside examined the intestines of mice that were constantly fed a diet rich in soybean oil for up to 24 weeks in the laboratory. They found that beneficial bacteria decreased and harmful bacteria (specifically, invasive adherent Escherichia coli) increased, conditions that can lead to colitis.
Poonamjot Deol, assistant research professional in the Department of Microbiology and Plant Pathology and co-corresponding author of the paper published July 3 in Gut Microbes, an open access journal.
Deol explained that the linoleic acid in soybean oil is the main concern.
"While our bodies need linoleic acid (Dr. Mercola advises a maximum of 5-7g daily), Americans today get 8-10% of their energy from linoleic acid daily, most of it from the oil of soybeans," he said. "Excess linoleic acid negatively affects the gut microbiome."
Deol and his co-authors found that a diet rich in soybean oil stimulates the growth of adherent invasive E. coli in the intestine. This bacteria uses linoleic acid as a carbon source to meet its nutritional demands. In addition, several beneficial bacteria in the intestine cannot resist linoleic acid and die, resulting in the growth of harmful bacteria. Invasive adherent E. coli has been identified in humans as causing IBD.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/19490976.2023.2229945 (2023).--
And they put it in EVERYTHING! 🤬
I avoid it as I’m allergic to it