A Month of Omega-6

Susan Allport, having written The Queen of Fats, unsurprisingly eats a diet high in omega-3 and low in omega-6. For one month, however, she ate a diet with more omega-6 and less omega-3 and wrote about it– like Supersize Me, except far more realistic.

O magazine commissioned a story about it but didn’t run it. “My weight gain was only 0.5 pounds and they thought their readers wouldn’t see the importance of that,” says Allport. Her draft is here. There were three striking changes over the month: the omega-6/omega-3 ratio in her blood doubled (implying that this ratio is controlled by diet rather than by stored fat); her belly fat noticeably increased; and the elasticity of her arteries decreased by 20%. This supports Allport’s belief (and mine) that omega-6 is dangerous when consumed in large amounts, as it is if you eat a lot of food cooked in vegetable oil.

The American Heart Association recommends that Americans eat more omega-6. The justification of this recommendation says nothing about the Israeli Paradox, which to me is the best reason to avoid a diet high in omega-6. Allport’s experience is another reason.
Allport is also the author of Explorers of the Black Box, about neuroscience research.

8 thoughts on “A Month of Omega-6

  1. Seth – What are foods that are typically high in Omega 6? I’m a vegan and have a feeling that this diet naturally keeps Omega 6 levels low anyways.

    Put differently, what are foods that are high in Omega 3s, but not high in Omega 6s? Flax oil is one, I’m assuming.

  2. Annie, you should read the article :P

    It appears Allport keeps her omegas balanced by using
    – flax, walnuts and canola
    and NOT using
    – peanut butter, soy oil, corn oil

    There are other ways to balance, but for a vegan her approach is perfect…except it relies on ALA for omega-3. Now that they have vegan supplements of DHA, which is the form immediately usable by the human body…I suggest those.

  3. The “Israeli Paradox” is no paradox at all – it’s simply more evidence that a low-fat diet high in vegetable derived PUFAs is unhealthy.

    To those of us who generally follow the opposite of the food pyramid and who consume plenty of natural saturated fat from grass-fed beef and fish with excellent 03-06 ratios, recommendations from the American Heart Association or the USDA are irrelevant.

  4. “How do you avoid lots of food cooked in vegetable oil in Beijing?”

    Because I eat lots of butter, flaxseed oil, and yogurt, I eat only one normal meal per day. Sometimes I cook that meal myself (using no vegetable oil). Sometimes I have grilled meat or boiled fish at that meal.

  5. “Because I eat lots of butter, flaxseed oil, and yogurt, I eat only one normal meal per day.”

    Interesting. I’m going to try amping up my butter + omega 3 oil consumption and similarly try 1 meal/day. (When I don’t eat enough butter or fish/coconut oil, I get hungry for extra meals and/or get carb cravings.)

    Seth, one question…are you finding that taking that much oil is resulting in ‘intestinal difficulties’? (If I take more than 1 T fish oil I am likely to need to race to the bathroom at some point the following day.)

  6. Joel Kauffman only rated Susan Allport’s book with 2 stars because it had so many errors of science (see amazon customer review forum for his main issues). For a list of 67 more errors email him at kauffman@bee.net

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