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Highly toxic compound found in fried foods

A new study has shown that a highly toxic compound forms when unsaturated vegetable oils are heated at frying temperatures for even half an hour.

This toxin, HNE (4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal), has long been linked with a variety of heart and nervous system diseases.

The HNE toxin forms in particularly high amounts in polyunsaturated oils such as sunflower, canola, soybean and corn, which contain the essential fatty acid linoleic acid (LA), according to the lead researcher A. Saari Csallany.

Their latest experiment found that "intermittent heating is just as bad as continuous heating". This reinforces the danger of re-heating oils at home or in restaurants. A study she published last year in the Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society also found that the level of absorbed HNE in French fries was equal to HNE concentrations in the oil the fries were cooked in.

Dr Csallany, a professor of food chemistry and nutritional biochemistry at the University of Minnesota, says "There's a tremendous literature in biochemistry on HNE, a library of studies going back 20 years. It's a very toxic compound."

She continues "HNE is a well known, highly toxic compound that is easily absorbed from the diet. The toxicity arises because the compound is highly reactive with proteins, nucleic acids - DNA and RNA - and other biomolecules. HNE is formed from the oxidation of linoleic acid, and reports have related it to several diseases, including atherosclerosis, stroke, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, Huntington's and liver diseases."

Based on the findings, she recommends that people avoid foods fried in polyunsaturated vegetable oils. For her part, Csallany said she would abandon vegetable oils as a cooking staple altogether.

She also noted that not all vegetable oils are created equal. "Oils that are high in saturated fats and monounsaturated fats are the most stable when heated" she said. The HNE compound does not arise in saturated oils sourced from animal fat, or from coconut oil.

Presented on May 4, 2005 at the 96th annual meeting of the American Oil Chemists Society in the Salt Lake City Convention Center.

Source: Health Central:  May 2005

From the Huntingdon's Disease Lighthouse newsletter:

HD Lighthouse Contributing Editor's Comment: Although Huntington's Disease is mentioned in the press release below, I can find no research which reports that HNE is elevated in the brains of HD patients. There is research showing that elevation of this neurotoxin occurs in the brain tissue of Alzheimer's patients and HIV patients experiencing progressive dementia, however. HNE even appears to associated with the formation of neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer's.

There would certainly appear to be a connection with HD. We know that lipid peroxidation results from free radical-mediated injury to brain. Free radical damage and the resulting oxidative stress in neurons occurs in Huntington's Disease and lipid peroxidation is also found. 4-Hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE) is a product of lipid peroxidation.

Given the findings in the press release below, it would seem best to avoid fried food in restaurants where the vegetable oil would be used for a considerable period of time. At home use other ways of cooking or if you want to use vegetable oil to crisp the food, use it at the end of the cooking process. This seems like good advice for all of us since we are all aging and good advice for people with Huntington's Disease in particular since their neurons are particularly vulnerable to oxidative stress.
--Marsha L. Miller, Ph.D.
Posted to the HDL: 29 May 2005

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