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It’s no surprise that the Mediterranean diet is linked to good health.
Small reliance on meat and scant use of butter limit the saturated fat
that raises blood cholesterol and possibly promotes development of
some cancers.
The Mediterranean diet includes a large proportion of fish, which is
rich in omega-3 fats that reduce inflammation, which seems to raise
both heart and cancer risks. An abundance of fruits, vegetables and
beans provides the many different phytochemicals that protect blood
vessels and guard cells against cancer-causing substances. Now,
studies show that olive oil may bolster each one of these benefits.
Originally, scientists thought olive oil’s primary benefit was its
monounsaturated fat.
Because 75 percent of the fatty acid “building blocks” that make up
olive oil come from monounsaturated fat, and only 13 percent from
saturated fat, it’s easy to see why blood cholesterol goes down when
olive oil replaces butter and high-fat meat as the main source of fat.
Analysis relates olive oil to the Mediterranean diet’s link with lower
blood pressure, as well.
Olive oil also offers several health advantages over more
polyunsaturated vegetable oils. Monounsaturated oils seem to cause
less production of the bile acids in the digestive tract that promote
colon cancer development.
Because monounsaturated fat is more stable than polyunsaturated fat,
it is less likely to generate the free radicals that create harmful
blood cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein, or “LDL”). LDL damages
blood vessels and can create changes in genes that may lead to cancer.
Finally, although olive oil does not provide the healthful omega-3 fat
found in seafood, it does strengthen omega-3’s anti-inflammatory
effects.
Research now shows that many of olive oil’s health benefits may
actually come from the more than 30 plant compounds it contains. These
compounds’ antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects promote heart
health and protect against cancer.
Choose least processed
Olive oil compounds also increase enzymes that block activation of
carcinogens and improve their removal from the body. These compounds
appear to slow development of cancer cells and increase their
self-destruction. While many of these benefits have been seen in
laboratory studies rather than controlled human intervention trials,
they are supported by what we see in population studies of the
Mediterranean diet.
All types of olive oil provide the monounsaturated fat linked with
health benefits, but to get the highest levels of the protective plant
compounds, choose “extra virgin” or “virgin” oil, the least processed
forms. Store it away from light and heat to maintain phytochemical
content.
Source: North American Olive Oil Association website
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