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Trans Fats
You probably haven't thought about trans fats in years β€” and that's the headline. The most damaging single ingredient in twentieth-century food, gram for gram, was quietly cleared out of the U.S. supermarket between 2003 and 2018 by a chain of bans that worked exactly as designed: tens of thousands of preventable heart-attack deaths a year at peak, down to a residual that for most readers in regulated markets is small enough to be a label-reading habit, not a daily vigilance. Three specific places it can still hit you are worth recognising on sight.
Avoid Β· Daily Evidence Strong Chapter Food

Among the cleanest cases in nutrition science: a generation of feeding trials, multi-cohort surveys, and population mortality data that moved the moment countries banned it. The action it asks of you is almost free β€” one line on an ingredient list. The catch is that most of the win is historical and your individual marginal benefit is small; but the per-gram damage of what's left is still the largest of any fat in food.

Start with what a trans fat actually is, because the chemistry tells you why the story ended the way it did. Vegetable oils begin as floppy, liquid molecules; pump hydrogen through them under pressure in the presence of a metal catalyst β€” the process is called partial hydrogenation β€” and they straighten out, harden up, and behave more like beef tallow at room temperature. The straightening is the entire point: shelf-stable, neutral-flavoured, cheap, perfect for shortening and frying oil. It is also what makes the molecule behave badly in your blood.

Other dietary fats nudge your LDL cholesterol up or down within a known range. Trans fats do something none of the others do: they raise LDL and lower HDL at the same time. In the cleanest feeding trial on the question, three weeks of swapping the fat in olive oil for the same calories of trans fat raised LDL by about 14 mg/dL and dropped HDL by about 7 mg/dL in healthy young adults Mensink & Katan 1990. The largest feeding-trial meta-analysis to date β€” sixty controlled studies, the gold-standard work β€” found that calorie-for-calorie, trans fat moves the lipid panel toward heart disease roughly twice as hard as saturated fat does Mensink et al. 2003.

Then there are the other channels. Trans fat raises Lp(a), a particle whose level in your blood is otherwise almost entirely fixed by your genes. It raises chronic inflammation β€” CRP and the surface proteins that pull white blood cells into the lining of your arteries Mozaffarian et al. 2004, Lopez-Garcia et al. 2005. Each channel piles on top of the cholesterol effect. The reason no other dietary intervention has a comparable per-gram cardiovascular footprint is that no other dietary intervention hits all four channels at once.

How sure we are

Industrial trans fat is one of the most thoroughly nailed-down findings in modern nutrition. The chain runs from controlled feeding studies to long-running prospective cohorts to before-and-after evidence from the countries that legislated bans β€” and every link points the same way.

The piece of evidence that turns this from a strong inference into something close to a closed case is what happened after countries acted on it. Denmark capped industrial trans fat at 2% of fat content in 2003 β€” the first country in the world to do so β€” and cardiovascular mortality fell faster over the following three years than in matched neighbouring countries, by an extra ~14 deaths per 100,000 person-years Restrepo & Rieger 2016. New York counties that restricted trans fats in restaurants between 2007 and 2011 saw heart-attack and stroke hospital admissions drop an extra 6.2% compared to counties that hadn't acted yet Brandt et al. 2017. These are quasi-experiments, not randomised trials, but the policy step-change design with geographic controls makes the causal call as clean as nutrition policy ever gets.

The major guideline bodies converge. The American Heart Association's 2017 advisory called the evidence on industrial trans fat the strongest of any dietary fat reviewed Sacks et al. 2017. The FDA's 2015 determination that partially hydrogenated oils were no longer Generally Recognized as Safe ended the legal pathway for adding them to U.S. food FDA 2015. The WHO's REPLACE initiative followed in 2018 with a global elimination target WHO 2018. When the lipid trials, the cohort surveys, the population-policy data and the guideline bodies all land in the same place, there is nothing left to debate.

What's left on the table

Here is the awkward truth about writing a 2026 stakes section on industrial trans fat: most of the lives this entry could have saved were saved twenty years ago, by people who never read it. The mortality drop from the bans is in the data; the heart attacks that didn't happen, didn't happen. The reader sitting in a U.S. or EU supermarket today is exposed to maybe a quarter of the trans fat their parents were, and the bulk of what is left is the small naturally-occurring amount in dairy and beef β€” which on the cohort evidence is not the same problem.

What is still on the table for an individual reader splits three ways. First β€” and most consequentially β€” the global story isn't finished. The WHO's progress data still has roughly five billion people living in food supplies without enforceable industrial-trans-fat protections, mostly in low- and middle-income countries; if you travel, you eat in those supplies WHO 2018. Second, the regulated-market residuals: an imported bakery product, a supplement capsule that still uses partially hydrogenated oil as a filler, a packaged snack whose ingredient list still reads "partially hydrogenated soybean oil." Rarer every year, but not zero. Third, the rounding rule on the U.S. Nutrition Facts panel: a serving containing anywhere up to half a gram of trans fat can legally print "0 g," and a multi-serving package eaten in one sitting can push you past the AHA's two-gram daily guidance ceiling without a single label that warns you.

None of this is dramatic. The decade you would extend by dragging your residual intake from 0.3% of calories down to 0% is statistical, not felt β€” your morning won't be different. The reason to do it anyway is that there is no other dietary fat where the per-gram lipid-channel damage is this large, so the marginal benefit of any reduction sits at the top of the per-gram ranking even when the absolute number is small.

What the labels and the headlines get wrong

"0 g trans fat on the label means zero." It does not. U.S. labelling rounds anything under half a gram per serving down to zero, so a panel printing "0" can hide up to 0.49 g per serving β€” and three servings of the same product is around a gram and a half, comfortably past the AHA's daily upper-limit guidance. The ingredient list is the unrounded test: if "partially hydrogenated" appears, the panel's "0" is a rounding artefact, not a fact.

"Margarine is the trans-fat product." Was, mostly isn't anymore. The original hard stick margarines built on partially hydrogenated oil did carry several grams per tablespoon at peak. Soft tub margarines were reformulated through the 1990s and 2000s β€” modern versions use interesterified or fully hydrogenated oils and carry essentially no trans fat. The category isn't the issue; the specific old chemistry is.

"All trans fats are equally dangerous." The trace amount in dairy fat and beef β€” ruminant trans fat, formed by bacteria in cow stomachs β€” looks different in the evidence than the industrial kind. The per-gram effect on cholesterol is roughly the same in feeding trials Brouwer et al. 2010; but at the doses people actually eat (around half a percent of calories, an order of magnitude below historical industrial intakes), large cohort studies that separate the two find no significant heart-disease signal from ruminant trans fat de Souza et al. 2015, Bendsen et al. 2011. The practical translation: cutting milk and beef on trans-fat grounds is not supported by the evidence, and this entry's "avoid" call is about the industrial source specifically.

How to spot what's left

Three patterns cover almost all of an individual reader's remaining exposure. Recognise the three on sight and the entry's job in your daily life is done.

That is the entire protocol. No test to order, no supplement to take, no dose to remember β€” three signals to recognise on sight. For most U.S. and EU readers eating mostly within their local food supply, the three signals trigger so rarely that the habit becomes automatic and effectively costless.

How this got fixed

Partial hydrogenation was patented in 1901 and commercialised in 1911 as Crisco, sold to Americans as a cleaner, cheaper alternative to lard. For most of the next century it was a quiet workhorse of the industrial food supply β€” in margarine, in bakery shortening, in restaurant fryer oils. The first warnings came from Fred Kummerow in the 1950s, but the field-shifting evidence was the Mensink & Katan crossover trial in 1990 showing the unique LDL-up-HDL-down signature Mensink & Katan 1990. The cohort evidence accumulated through the 1990s; by the 2006 NEJM review the case for regulatory action was overwhelming Mozaffarian et al. 2006. Denmark legislated a 2%-of-fat-content cap in 2003; New York City banned trans fats from restaurants in 2006; the FDA required mandatory labelling that same year, ruled partially hydrogenated oils not Generally Recognized as Safe in 2015, and made enforcement binding in 2018 FDA 2015. WHO REPLACE followed in 2018 with a 2023 global elimination target WHO 2018. First credible scientific signal to near-elimination in the U.S. supermarket took about three decades β€” by the standards of nutrition policy, unusually fast.

Adjacent topics worth knowing about: saturated fat β€” related mechanism, weaker per-gram cardiovascular signal, and an actively contested literature rather than a settled one; ApoB as the single blood marker that integrates the LDL channel into one number, useful for tracking what the trans-fat era left in your arteries if you grew up eating it; Lp(a) testing as a one-time genetic check (the same particle trans fat elevates); ultra-processed foods as the larger pattern industrial trans fat was once a component of; and the seed-oil debate, which is louder, less settled, and worth treating as a separate question rather than a continuation of this one.

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