Fatty Acid Content of Refined Vegetable Oils

Vegetable Oil Fatty Acid Composition | Nut Fatty Acid Composition | Seed Fatty Acid Composition

Vegetable oils were obviously not a component of any pre-agricultural or hunter gatherer diet, simply because the technology to produce them did not exist.  Oils made from walnuts, almonds, olives, sesame seeds and flax seeds were first produced using crude presses between 5,000 and 6,000 years ago.  However, except for olive oil, most early use of oils was for non-food purposes such as illumination, lubrication and medicine.  It wasnât until the beginning of the 20th century with the advent of mechanically driven steel expellers and hexane extraction processes did vegetable oils contribute significantly to the energy intake of the western diet.  Today vegetable oils used in cooking, salad oils, margarine, shortening and processed foods supply 17.6 % of the total daily energy intake in the U.S. diet.  The enormous infusion of vegetable oils into the western diet starting in the early 1900âs represents the greatest single factor responsible for elevating the dietary omega 6 to omega 3 ratio to its current and unhealthful value of 10.  In hunter gatherer diets the omega 6/omega 3 ratio was closer to 2.

So if this is the case, then why should you not eliminate all vegetable oils from your diet?  Simply stated, there are at least five oils (flaxseed, canola, walnut, olive, and avocado) that can promote health and facilitate getting the correct balance of good fats in your diet.  Because hunter gatherers ate the entire carcass of wild animals (tongue, eyes, brains, marrow, liver, gonads, intestines, kidneys, etc.) and relished fatty plant foods (nuts and seeds) they did not have to worry about the correct balance of fatty acids in their diet.  It came out correctly in the wash.  For most of us the thought of eating organs is not only repulsive, but is also not practical as we simply do not have access to wild game.   Consequently, by eating lean meats, fish and seafood along with healthful oils, nuts and seeds, you can get the correct balance of fatty acids in your diet.

As you can see from the tables listed below, only three vegetable oils have omega 6/omega 3 ratios of less than 3.  These are flaxseed oil (0.24), canola (2.2) and mustard seed (2.6).  Although I originally recommended mustard seed oil in the first edition of The Paleo Diet, I can no longer make this recommendation because of its high erucic acid (22:1) concentration of 41.2 %.  High dietary intake of erucic acid in laboratory animals has been shown to cause deleterious changes in heart structure and function.  Human studies in India show that mustard seed oil consumption counters the heart healthy effects of its high concentration of omega 3 fatty acids.

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Hence, this leaves only two vegetable oils (canola and flaxseed) that do not contribute to an elevated intake of omega 6 fatty acids.  Recently, a number of epidemiologic studies have shown a higher risk for prostate cancer with increased consumption of alpha linolenic acid (ALA), a major component of both canola and flaxseed oil.

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In contrast, the consumption of longer chain omega 3 fatty acids (EPA + DHA) found in fish and fish oil capsules actually decreases the risk for prostate cancer.   Further, not all studies have demonstrated a statistical link between ALA and prostate cancer.

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In support of this notion, are animal experiments showing that whole flaxseed actually inhibits the growth and development of prostate cancer.

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The case against flaxseed and canola oil as promoters of prostate cancer is currently based solely upon epidemiologic evidence and therefore remains inconclusive because of the total lack of confirming experimental evidence.  Because the majority of epidemiological studies support the notion that ALA is protective against cardiovascular disease, both canola and flaxseed oils should still be viewed as healthful.

Both olive oil and avocado oil are high (73.9 and 70.6 % respectively) in cholesterol lowering monounsaturated fatty acids, but have less than favorable omega 6/omega 3 ratios of 11.7 and 13.5.  Consequently, excessive consumption of both of these oils without adequate intake of long chain omega 3 fatty acids (EPA + DHA) will derail an otherwise healthy diet.   We recommend that you get 0.5-1.8 grams of EPA + DHA per day in your diet from either fish or fish oil capsules (see additional information about omega 3 and fish).

In the following tables we list the fatty acid content of most commercially available vegetable oils.  You can use these tables to help you make an informed decision in choosing your vegetable oil based upon its fatty acid composition.  If you are unfamiliar with fatty acid nomenclature and how the different types of fatty acids impact your health please refer to our fatty acid primer.

Please click here to read an article about peanut oil and cardiovascular disease.

Table of Vegetable Oils

Table of Vegetable Oils: linoleic acid, caproic acid, etc.

*Units: grams fatty acids per 100 grams oil

Fatty Acids   Almond Apricot kernel Avocado Canola Coconut Corn Cottonseed Flaxseed Grapeseed Hazelnut
Common
Name
Saturated                    
Caproic acid 6:0         0.6          
Caprylic acid 8:0         7.5          
Capric acid 10:0         6.0          
Lauric acid 12:0         44.6          
Myristic acid 14:0         16.8 0.24 0.8   0.1 0.1
Palmitic acid 16:0 6.5 5.8 10.9 4.0 8.2 10.58 22.7 5.3 6.7 5.2
Margaric acid 17:0           0.07        
Stearic acid 18:0 1.7 0.5 0.66 1.8 2.8 1.85 2.3 4.1 2.7 2.0
Arachidic acid 20:0       0.7   0.43        
Behenic acid 22:0       0.4            
Lignoceric acid 24:0       0.2            
Total   8.2 6.3 11.56 7.1 86.5 13.17 25.8 9.4 9.5 7.3

111

Monounsaturated
                   
Palmitoleic acid 16:1 0.6 1.5 2.67 0.2   0.14 0.8   0.3 0.2
111 17:1                    
Oleic acid 18:1 69.4 58.5 67.89 56.1 5.8 27.33 17.0 20.2 15.8 77.8
Gadoleic acid 20:1       1.7            
Erucic acid 22:1       0.6            
Total   70 60 70.56 58.6 5.8 27.47 17.8 20.2 16.1 78

111

Polyunsaturated
                   
111     Omega
6
                   
Linoleic acid 18:2n6 17.4 29.3 12.53 20.3 1.80 53.52 51.5 12.7 69.6 10.1
Arachidonic acid 20:4n6             0.1      
111 Total n6 17.4 29.3 12.53 20.3 1.80 53.52 51.6 12.7 69.6 10.1
111     Omega
3
                   
Alpha linolenic
acid (ALA)
18:3n3  0 0 0.96 9.3 0 1.16 0.20 53.3 0.1 0
111 Total n3 0 0 0.96 9.3 0 1.16 0.20 53.3 0.1 0
Total Poly   17.4 29.3 13.49 29.6 1.80 54.68 51.8 66 69.7 10.1

111
Ratio
n6/n3
no n3 no n3 13.1 2.2 no n3 46.1 258.0 0.24 696.0 no n3

 

 

 

Fatty Acids   Mustard Oat Olive Palm Peanut Rice bran Safflower Sesame Soybean Sunflower Walnut Wheat germ
Common
Name
Saturated                        
Caproic acid 6:0                        
Caprylic acid 8:0                        
Capric acid 10:0                        
Lauric acid 12:0   0.39   0.1                
Myristic acid 14:0 1.39 0.24   1.0 0.1 0.7     0.1     0.1
Palmitic acid 16:0 3.75 16.67 10.93 43.5 9.5 16.9 4.29 8.9 10.3 5.9 7.0 16.6
Margaric acid 17:0                        
Stearic acid 18:0 1.12 1.05 1.98 4.3 2.2 1.6 1.92 4.8 3.8 4.5 2.0 0.5
Arachidic acid 20:0     0.42   1.4              
Behenic acid 22:0     0.13   2.8              
Lignoceric acid 24:0         0.9              
Total   6.26 18.35 13.46 48.9 16.9 19.2 6.21 13.7 14.2 10.4 9 17.2

111

Monounsaturated
                       
Palmitoleic acid 16:1 0.22 0.2 1.16 0.3 0.1 0.2   0.2 0.2   0.1 0.5
111 17:1     0.14                  
Oleic acid 18:1 11.61 34.9 72.29 36.6 44.8 39.1 14.36 39.3 22.8 19.5 22.2 14.6
Gadoleic acid 20:1 6.19   0.31 0.1 1.3     0.2 0.2   0.4  
Erucic acid 22:1 41.18                      
Total   59.2 35.1 73.9 37 46.2 39.3 14.36 39.7 23.2 19.5 22.7 15.1

111

Polyunsaturated
                       

111
    Omega
6
                       
Linoleic acid 18:2n6 15.33 39.08 9.21 9.1 32 33.4 74.6 41.3 51.0 65.7 52.9 54.8
Arachidonic acid 20:4n6                        
111 Total n6 15.33 39.08 9.21 9.1 32 33.4 74.6 41.3 51 65.7 52.9 54.8
111     Omega 3                        
Alpha linolenic
acid (ALA)
18:3n3  5.90 1.79 0.79 0.2 0 1.6 0 0.3 6.8 0 10.4 6.9
111 Total n3 5.9 1.79 0.79 0.2 0 1.6 0 0.3 6.8 0 10.4 6.9
Total Poly   21.23 40.87 10 9.3 32 35 74.6 41.6 57.8 65.7 63.3 61.7

111
Ratio
n6/n3
2.6 21.8 11.7 45.5 no n3 20.9 no n3 137.7 7.5 no n3 5.1 7.9

*Units: grams fatty acids per 100 grams oil