Literature
Whole fat butter may control diabetes in humans
Washington, July 23
A unique saturated fat
found in fish and whole fat daily products can reverse diabetes,
researchers have reported after discovering that dolphins suffering from
prediabetes were cured when fed with a modified diet rich in the
saturated fat.
The researchers are hopeful that controlled doses
of this saturated fat called heptadecanoic acid may help reverse
prediabetes in humans soon.
Because of the popularity of
fish-based omega-3 fatty acids as a human health supplement, the team
from the US National Marine Mammal Foundation (NMMF) assessed fatty acid
blood levels in 49 dolphins as well as in their dietary fish.
"We
were surprised to find that among the 55 fatty acids studied, the
saturated fat heptadecanoic acid appeared to have had the most
beneficial impact on dolphin metabolism," said Stephanie Venn-Watson,
director of NMMF's translational medicine and research programme.
Dolphins with higher levels of heptadecanoic acid in their blood had lower insulin and triglycerides, he said.
The study also showed that while some fish have high levels of heptadecanoic acid other fish types had none.
Six dolphins with low heptadecanoic acid were then fed fish high in this fatty acid.
Within
six months on the new diet, indicators of metabolic syndrome in
dolphins, including elevated insulin, glucose, and triglycerides
normalised.
Key to this surprising outcome was reversal of high ferritin, an underlying precursor to metabolic syndrome.
"We saw blood ferritin levels decrease in all six dolphins within three weeks on the new diet," Venn-Watson said.
Heptadecanoic acid, also called margaric acid, is found in dairy fat, rye and some fish.
The fish with the highest heptadecanoic acid content was mullet.
"We
hypothesise that widespread movement away from whole fat dairy products
in human populations may have created unanticipated heptadecanoic acid
deficiencies," Venn-Watson contended.
"This dietary deficiency
may be playing a role in the global diabetes pandemic," he warned in a
paper that appeared in the journal PLOS ONE.
Does this mean that we can now eat butter without guilt?
"Butter
may have both good and bad saturated fats but it is always best to
check with your physician before making changes to your diet," the
authors concluded.