Coconut oil has potential as a nutritional supplement for treating Alzheimer’s disease, due to its medium chain fatty acids and antioxidant properties.
Review Article Alzheimer's Disease Coconut Oil
The study examined the unique chemical composition of coconut oil that is enriched with medium chain fatty acids, unlike long-chain fatty acids. This distinction matters because these medium chain fatty acids have a specific digestion and metabolism pathway—they bypass the lymphatic system and go straight to the liver through the portal vein. This unique attribute in absorption and metabolism allows these fats to readily form ketone bodies, which are an efficient energy source for brains, especially those experiencing cognitive impairments like Alzheimer's disease.
As for the discussion of the results, the findings showed that medium-chain triglycerides in coconut oil get metabolized and absorbed to mitigate the severity of certain physiological risk factors—elevated LDL levels, hypertension, Type 2 diabetes, obesity, and insulin resistance—all risk factors that contribute to the prevalence and incidence of Alzheimer's disease. Additionally, coconut oil contains many polyphenolic compounds that serve as antioxidants, combating oxidative stress and inflammation—in turn, potentially downregulating the etiology of Alzheimer's disease. The antioxidant capacity, however, can vary depending on the processing conditions used in extraction techniques of coconut oil.
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