How Coconut Oil Could Help Reduce The Symptoms Of Type 2 Diabetes

May 5, 2010 by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Diabetes, Nutrition / Diet 

http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_Vp29PQUHLwQ/SdedJKrpJoI/AAAAAAAAAWw/OQftmj45qDE/s320/coconut_oil-407x407-300x300.jpgA new study in animals demonstrates that a diet rich in coconut oil protects against ‘insulin resistance’ (an impaired ability of cells to respond to insulin) in muscle and fat. The diet also avoids the accumulation of body fat caused by other high fat diets of similar calorie content. Together these findings are important because obesity and insulin resistance are major factors leading to the development of Type 2 diabetes.

The study is also interesting because it helps explain human studies showing that people who incorporate medium chain ‘fatty acids’, such as those found in coconut oil, into their diets can lose body fat.

Dr Nigel Turner and Associate Professor Jiming Ye, from Sydney’s Garvan Institute of Medical Research, compared fat metabolism and insulin resistance in mice fed coconut oil and lard based diets. Their findings are now published online in the international journal Diabetes.

“The medium chain fatty acids, like those found in coconut oil, are interesting to us because they behave very differently to the fats normally found in our diets,” said study leader Nigel Turner. Read more

Food Attitudes Affect Obesity Risk In Middle Aged Women

http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:5K37ub1IZrnF5M:http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_rKvAmdl5y-8/Rvol5afGc-I/AAAAAAAAAqY/9cX9-GaZbBU/s400/diet-bare-feet-wrinkled-skin-from-bath-weighing-scales-mechanical-on-plastic-runner-weight-loss-monitoring-program-programme-1-DHD.jpgA small study of middle-aged women finds that “guilt-ridden dieters,” impulsive eaters and those too busy to focus on food are the most likely to show signs of obesity.

Half of women fit into two other categories, the study says, and were found to be the least likely to be leaning toward fat. Both types of women in those groups are concerned about nutrition and like to eat healthy.

“The basic attitude that people have about food is related to the likelihood that they’re at risk for obesity and weight gain,” said researcher Dennis Degeneffe, a study co-author.

The study, which appears in the December issue of the journal Health Education & Behavior, placed 200 women into five groups based on their attitudes about food. The women had an average age of 46, were well-educated (two-thirds had a four-year degree or higher) and 86 percent were white.

The researchers then compared the groups of women by measurements such as percentage of body fat, waist size and body mass index (BMI). Read more