4.1
Blood Lipids and Lipoproteins
A double-blind randomized controlled trial involving 78 healthy adults who consumed 10 grams of MCTs daily for 12 weeks reported no significant differences in fasting triglycerides or total cholesterol compared to those who consumed a blend of rapeseed and soybean oils.[68] Similarly, a study of 18 healthy women reported that consuming 30 grams of MCT oil did not significantly alter triglycerides, total and LDL-cholesterol, apoA-1, apoB, or LDL particle size compared to lauric acid, although only lauric acid increased HDL-cholesterol.[69]
Consuming 10% of calories from MCFAs was reported to have intermediate effects on total and LDL-cholesterol compared to myristic and oleic acid, with no difference in triglycerides.[70] Additionally, the MCFA diet slightly lowered apoA-1 while myristic and oleic acids increased it, and all of the fats similarly raised apoB, leading to a significantly lower apoA-1 to apoB ratio in the MCFA group.[70] There was no effect of MCFAs on lipoprotein(a).[70]
However, consuming 40% of calories from MCT oil (relative to soybean oil) was found to significantly increase triglycerides by 42% and reduce HDL-c by 15% in just six days without effecting total or LDL-cholesterol levels.[71] A 3-fold increase in fasting triglycerides was noted when participants were overfeeding.[72] In either case, consuming a single meal with ~40 grams of MCTs had no effect on postprandial triglyceride levels.[71][72] An early study also found that consuming 40% of calories from MCT oil significantly increased total cholesterol compared to corn oil but lowed cholesterol compared to butter.[73]
In overweight and obese adults, consuming 18-24 grams of MCTs for 90 days in the context of a hypocaloric diet resulted in similar reductions in total cholesterol and LDL-c and increases in HDL-c as olive oil, with neither diet affecting triglycerides.[74] Another study in obese men found that daily supplementation with 20 grams of MCT oil had no effect on the blood lipid profile compared to corn oil.[75]
However, a study in overweight and obese men found that MCFAs significantly increases nearly all VLDL, IDL, and LDL subfractions compared to linoleic acid, which was associated with a significant reduction in VLDL, IDL, and LDL particle lipolysis and uptake in the liver and no modification to VLDL production.[76] These findings are complemented by a study in rats showing that MCFAs lower lipoprotein lipase activation in adipose tissue.[77]
Several studies by a group of researchers in Beijing, China have investigated a type of triglyceride in which the fatty acids are a mixture of long- and medium-chain fatty acids, so that it contains 13% MCFAs (e.g., 13 grams of MCFAs per 100 grams of the oil). Compared to purely long-chain triglycerides supplied by rapeseed and soybean oils, consuming 25-30 grams per day of this mixture (3-4 grams of MCFAs) has similar effects on triglycerides and cholesterol in healthy adults[78] and significantly reduces triglycerides and LDL-cholesterol in hypertriglyceridemic adults.[79][80]
These effects appear to occur only in men,[81] which the authors speculate may be owed to a deficiency in estrogen among the primarily postmenopausal women participating in the study.[82] Additionally, the MCFA mixture group lost significantly more fat mass than the long-chain fat group in these studies, which may have impacted the oil’s effect on blood lipids. A reanalysis of the data by BMI status showed that only overweight and obese participants experienced significant reductions in triglycerides and LDL-cholesterol and were also the only groups to experience significant reductions in fat mass,[83] supporting the notion that weight loss was the primary driver of the superior effect on blood lipids.
Low doses of MCT oil (10-20 grams) appear to have little to no effect on blood lipids in healthy adults. However, large doses (40% of kcal) appear to notably increase fasting triglyceride levels, especially when overfeeding.
One study in patients with hyperlipidemia reported that consuming ~10% of energy intake from MCT oil significantly increases total cholesterol (16%) and non-HDL cholesterol (19%) compared to corn oil without affecting fasting triglycerides and preventing an increase in postprandial triglycerides.[84] However, consuming 43% of calories from MCTs, again in patients with hyperlipidemia, caused a significant increase in triglycerides (20-30%) and VLDL (26-38%) compared to both palm oil and high-oleic sunflower oil, as well as significant increases in total (12%) and LDL-cholesterol (14%) compared to sunflower oil only.[85]
In people with type-2 diabetes, small doses of MCT oil (18 grams) have been reported to significantly reduce total cholesterol (12%), LDL-c (17%), and HDL-c (16%) relative to corn oil, with no difference in triglycerides.[47] However, the MCT oil group also lost significantly more bodyweight that may have affected changes in blood lipids. Consuming 54-103 grams per day of MCT oil increased triglycerides in patients with type-2 diabetes only under weight-maintenance conditions; no effect was observed when the patients were eating in an energy deficit.[86]
An inpatient feeding study compared weight-maintenance diets with 40% of calories supplied by MCTs or long-chain fats provided by partially hydrogenated shortening (Crisco), each consumed over a four-day period.[87] The MCT diet significantly reduced triglycerides in participants with type-2 diabetes (-19%) but did not affect total and HDL-cholesterol. A double-blind randomized controlled trial involving people with type 2 diabetes reported that consuming 28% of kcal from MCTs had no effect on triglycerides or cholesterol levels relative to a common vegetable oil over two weeks.[88]
In people with elevated triglyceride and cholesterol levels, MCT oil appears to increase blood lipids further, especially compared to oils high in polyunsaturated fatty acids. However, even large doses of MCT oil appear to have minor effects on the blood lipids of people with type-2 diabetes.
It has been suggested that any cholesterol-raising effect of MCTs is owed to the use of a comparator oil high in polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are well known to reduce blood cholesterol concentrations.[89] Accordingly, MCTs may be relatively neutral compared to monounsaturated and long-chain saturated fatty acids, which has been shown via comparisons to olive oil,[74] oleic and mystryic acids,[70] and butter.[73]
Most studies have compared MCTs to highly polyunsaturated seed oils such as corn and soybean oils. Further research is necessary to determine the effects of MCTs compared to other dietary fats.