种子油恐慌正在伤害我的心脏病患者。
The seed oil panic is hurting my cardiac patients

原始链接: https://www.statnews.com/2026/05/22/seed-oils-healthy-fats-tallow-fact-check-cardiac-health/

在这篇临床观点文章中,注册营养师科尔·汉森(Cole Hanson)对日益增长的“植物油恐慌”提出了质疑。这种思潮将植物油贴上“有毒”的标签,同时却推崇黄油和牛油等动物脂肪。尽管该运动在业界获得了一定的势头,并影响了企业的食品配方改革,但它与数十年的心血管研究结论相悖。 汉森认为,“种子油”(seed oils)是一个营销术语,而非营养学范畴。大量证据表明,以多不饱和脂肪代替饱和脂肪能显著降低心血管疾病风险。人们将超加工食品的危害归咎于单一成分,这实际上是一种误导——超加工食品之所以有害,是因为其经过特殊设计,会破坏人体的饱腹感。此外,推广牛油的使用反而会导致饱和脂肪和天然反式脂肪摄入量升高,从而直接损害心脏健康。 最终,汉森指出,这场“反种子油”运动并非公共卫生的胜利,而是肉类和乳制品行业的一次营销重塑。通过聚焦于单一成分,该运动掩盖了真正的罪魁祸首:超加工食品体系。作者总结道,最有效但也最“无聊”的建议依然适用:优先选择天然全食,减少摄入超加工产品,并以科学证据为准,而非盲从社交媒体上的健康趋势。

这篇链接的《STAT News》文章在 Hacker News 上引发了关于当前“种子油恐慌”的激烈讨论。医疗专业人士和评论者对一种趋势表示沮丧:患者往往基于轶事性的健康建议,而非扎实的科学依据,用牛油等饱和动物脂肪取代植物油(如橄榄油)。 讨论的要点包括: * **科学批判:** 评论者认为,将所有“种子油”妖魔化在科学上是不准确的。他们指出,与饱和脂肪相比,菜籽油等油脂提供了更理想的 omega-3 与 omega-6 比例,且在心血管研究中表现良好。 * **营销与健康的博弈:** 用户批评食品行业通过更换脂肪或将高果糖玉米糖浆换成“蔗糖”来重新包装超加工食品,并认为这些调整几乎没有实际的健康益处。 * **系统性担忧:** 许多参与者担心,由网红主导、且往往与更广泛的政治运动混为一谈的非科学健康趋势,正在削弱公众对公共卫生专业知识的信任。批评者指出,仅关注膳食脂肪忽略了心血管疾病的主要驱动因素(如遗传),同时也导致潜在的危险错误信息在机构层面获得了关注。
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原文

She came in wanting to do right by her husband.

He’d been losing weight — the kind of weight loss that says something’s wrong — and she’d spent weeks trying to reverse it. Cream in his coffee, butter in his soups, all the gristle he could handle. She’d read somewhere that fat was the most calorie-dense food she could give him, and she was right.

She’d also read that seed oils were toxic, that the real enemy was vegetable oil, that we were supposed to be eating traditional animal fats all along.

By the time she was admitted herself — heart procedure, blood pressure that had been climbing for months, both of them now taking turns as patients — she told me she suspected the diet hadn’t helped. In the quiet space between us, there wasn’t room left to argue.

This is happening constantly now, and it’s only going to accelerate.

The seed oil panic has achieved full institutional legitimacy. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has called canola, corn, soybean, sunflower, cottonseed, and grapeseed oils the most unhealthy aspect of the American diet. The January 2026 dietary guidelines — which discarded 421 pages of scientific recommendations from the advisory committee — now list butter and beef tallow alongside olive oil as acceptable cooking fats. Then came the food companies: Steak ’n Shake “RFK’d” its fries, PepsiCo announced it would phase canola and soybean oils out of Lay’s and Tostitos, with Kraft Heinz, General Mills, and Nestlé following with their own reformulation pledges. The food industry is responding, at great speed, to a story that is running well ahead of the evidence.

As a clinical dietitian who works with cardiac patients every day, I want to offer something the panic doesn’t have: something slower and less influencer friendly. Let’s talk about what the evidence actually shows.

First, “seed oils” is a marketing term, not a nutritional category. What we’re actually talking about are vegetable oils high in polyunsaturated and monounsaturated fats — the kinds of fats that, in decades of research, are associated with lower rates of cardiovascular disease when they replace saturated fat in the diet. A 2020 Cochrane meta-analysis of roughly 59,000 participants across 15 randomized controlled trials found that replacing saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat reduced combined cardiovascular events by 21%. Cardiologists note that the risk reduction from this dietary substitution is comparable to the benefits of statin medications. We don’t make a habit of telling statin patients to stop their medication because of something they heard on a podcast.

The core claim of the seed oil panic is that linoleic acid — an omega-6 fatty acid in these oils — drives systemic inflammation, which drives chronic disease. It sounds plausible. But “sounds plausible” and “is demonstrated in humans at dietary exposure levels” are different things. Randomized controlled trial evidence does not support this claim.

There’s a secondary argument about oxidation — seed oils go rancid at high heat, producing potentially harmful compounds. This idea is chemically real and worth being thoughtful about (don’t reuse frying oil repeatedly). But the evidence that oxidation at home-cooking levels causes measurable harm in humans isn’t there.

Some of what’s driving the seed oil panic isn’t wrong — it’s just misattributed. Ultra-processed food really is a problem. The National Institutes of Health published the first randomized controlled trial on ultra-processed food in 2019 (a landmark study by Kevin Hall’s team) showing that people randomized to an ultra-processed diet consumed about 500 more calories per day and gained weight, even when macronutrients were matched precisely. The food was engineered to override satiety — proven, not suggested.

But seed oils are not why ultra-processed food behaves that way. They are but one ingredient in a complex and highly engineered product designed to keep you eating past fullness. The oil isn’t the villain; the food product surrounding the oil is. Blaming seed oils for the harms of ultra-processed food is as helpful as blaming the wrapper.

There’s something else worth knowing about beef tallow that isn’t making it into the wellness content: It contains ruminant trans fats. They’re naturally occurring, present in all beef fat, and according to cardiologists, present in tallow at levels far above what’s considered safe. A full Steak ’n Shake meal — their 7×7 Steakburger and a large order of their celebrated “RFK’d” tallow fries — clocks in at more than 90 grams of saturated fat and nearly 10 grams of trans fats combined. The administration that declared it is “ending the war on saturated fat” has found a cooking fat that delivers more of the exact compounds most associated with cardiovascular mortality. MAHA is road paved with artery-clogging cholesterol, and they’re calling it a health revolution.

There’s a second irony buried in the dietary guidelines themselves. The document urges Americans to “prioritize oils with essential fatty acids.” In nutrition, “essential” has a precise meaning: fatty acids the body cannot synthesize and must obtain from diet — linoleic acid and alpha-linolenic acid, the omega-6 and omega-3s. The oils richest in these essential fatty acids are canola, soybean, sunflower — the very oils the guidelines are steering people away from. Olive oil, butter, and tallow, the fats offered as examples, are not primary sources of essential fatty acids. The guidelines used the right scientific language and then pointed it at the wrong foods.

The panic isn’t landing randomly, and neither is the enthusiasm.

The seed oil panic is extraordinarily convenient for the beef and dairy industries. Rehabilitating saturated fat — or casting public doubt on the evidence against it — is something those industries have spent decades and enormous lobbying dollars trying to accomplish. The Meat Institute celebrated the new dietary guidelines. Soybean growers sounded the alarm.

The food industry reformation underway isn’t making chips healthier; it’s swapping one fat for another inside the same ultra-processed product while everything else stays the same. The fries are still served with a 700-calorie shake. The chips are still engineered to be hyperpalatable. The only thing that changed is which fat is in them.

MAHA styles itself as a populist revolt against corporate food. A movement that threw out 421 pages of scientific recommendations and handed the beef industry its best marketing cycle in decades isn’t a revolt.  It’s a rebrand with a body count it’ll take years to measure.

Back in the hospital, my patients are replacing olive oil with beef tallow, even if they don’t tell me during cardiac rehab. One told me they are avoiding beans because “seed oils” appeared on the label of a steamer veggie bag. They are loading up on saturated fat in the sincere belief that they are protecting their hearts.

The right answer here doesn’t make good content.  It is less dramatic than a dietary revolution. It doesn’t have a podcast.

The boring answer — eat more vegetables and legumes, less ultra-processed food, default to olive oil, and yes, the source of fat matters less than the overall dietary pattern — is boring because it has been substantially right for a long time and doesn’t sell anything. Nutrition science will always lose the attention war to something that offers community and tells you who to blame.

Cole Hanson, M.P.H., R.D.N., L.D., is a registered dietitian and clinical inpatient dietitian in Minneapolis, where he works in cardiac health, mental health, and critical care.

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