Benefits of Monounsaturated Fat
Mar 3, 2017 under Food and Drinks
1. Protects Against Heart Disease
The most well-documented benefit of consuming monounsaturated fats is the potential for keeping your heart healthy, especially in terms of replacing high levels of saturated fats with MUFAs. Consuming higher levels of MUFAs than saturated fats has a protective effect against metabolic syndrome, a cluster of disorders that increase a person’s risk for cardiovascular disease.
2. Improves Insulin Sensitivity and Helps Your Body Use Its Fat Properly
Another contributing factor to the declining health of much of the Western world is the prevalence of insulin resistance. Considered a very common condition, insulin resistance affects over 3 million people in the U.S. every year. It impacts equally across age groups after the age of 18 and is marked by the body’s inability to process and release insulin at correct levels. This causes glucose to build up in your bloodstream and often leads to type II diabetes.
3. Helps You Lose Weight
Diets high in MUFAs aren’t only helpful regarding weight loss because of their impact on adipose dysfunction. They’ve also been proven to help patients with elevated levels of certain liver enzymes (a precursor to liver disease) decrease weight, waist circumference and cholesterol, along with other obesity-related factors.
4. Improves Your Mood
Are you feeling better yet? Good. Because eating more monounsaturated fats is even good for your mood. Replacing saturated fats with monounsaturated fats in your diet can reduce anger levels as well as increase your daily physical activity and resting energy expenditure, meaning you burn more calories while at rest.
5. Strengthens Your Bones
Monounsaturated fats also allow your bones to absorb calcium efficiently, leading to denser bones and less occurrence of brittle bones and conditions like osteoporosis. Conversely, diets high in saturated fats and low in unsaturated fats are associated with lower bone density and reduced calcium absorption.
6. Reduces Cancer Risks
For decades, experts have debated the impact of high-fat diets on the risk of cancer. While some research has been inconclusive, a lot of recent material supports the hypothesis that diets high in fat, especially unsaturated fats, lend themselves to a reduced risk of certain cancers. Thus, foods high in MUFAs are potential cancer-fighting foods.
Tags: Monounsaturated Fat