The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONVerdict Score 68Worth-It: Poor ROI (25/100)

Seed oils aren't the poison — but they're not saving your life either.

Stop worrying about the tablespoon of canola oil in your stir-fry. Start taking 1-2g of EPA+DHA omega-3 daily. That single change does more for your inflammation profile than eliminating every seed oil in your kitchen.

  1. What the data actually shows: Eating more omega-6 from seed oils does not raise inflammation markers in human trials. The biochemical pathway (linoleic acid → arachidonic acid → inflammation) is real on paper but capped at 0.2% conversion in your body. Fifteen RCTs confirm this.
  2. The part that's backwards: The omega-6 to omega-3 ratio is a distraction. What actually matters is your absolute EPA+DHA intake. High seed oil consumption doesn't suppress omega-3 benefits when you're getting enough omega-3.
  3. What to actually do about it: Take 1-2g EPA+DHA daily (fish oil or algae). Don't deep-fry in reused oil. Stop citing the Sydney Diet Heart Study without mentioning the trans-fat confound. Your home cooking oil is not the problem.

Think of seed oils like salt on a highway in winter. The anti-seed-oil crowd says salt is destroying the road. The pro-seed-oil crowd says salt prevents accidents. Both are partly right — salt does corrode infrastructure over decades, and it does reduce crashes when applied correctly. But if your car is sliding, the issue isn't the salt on the road. It's the ice, the speed, and the tyres. Seed oils aren't the road salt everyone should panic about — the ultra-processed food system they travel in is the real surface condition.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Seed Oils

The Controversy, What the Evidence Actually Shows

PARTIALLY CORRECT MODERATE CONVICTION

What This Changes in Your Real Life

Seed oils practical guidance
Common Belief

What Most People Think

Seed oil controversy

Seed oils (sunflower, canola, corn, soybean) are metabolic toxins. The argument is biochemically elegant: they're packed with omega-6 linoleic acid, which the body converts to arachidonic acid, which triggers pro-inflammatory prostaglandins and leukotrienes. Since seed oil consumption has risen in parallel with modern metabolic disease, they're the culprit.

Smart people make this argument. The biochemical pathway is real. The mechanism is described correctly. The problem is what happens when you actually test it in humans.

The Research

What the Evidence Actually Shows

Seed oil evidence review

Seed oils cause systemic inflammation FALSIFIED

The LA to AA to inflammation cascade fails in human in vivo testing. Increasing dietary linoleic acid — even well above typical Western intake — does not raise CRP, IL-6, TNF-alpha, or fibrinogen in controlled feeding trials. FADS1/FADS2 desaturase enzymes cap the LA-to-AA conversion at approximately 0.2%. Some studies show an inverse relationship — higher serum LA correlates with lower baseline CRP.

Innes & Calder 2018, meta-analysis of 15+ RCTs

Replacing saturated fat with PUFAs reduces CVD PARTIALLY TRUE

The best synthesis — Hooper et al. 2020 (Cochrane, 15 RCTs, N~59,000) — shows a 21% reduction in combined cardiovascular events (RR 0.79). But here's the genuine puzzle: this doesn't translate to mortality. All-cause mortality: RR 0.96 (neutral). Cardiovascular mortality: RR 0.95 (neutral). You can reduce non-fatal events without reducing deaths.

Historical trials (Sydney, Minnesota) showed harm — but used trans-fat-containing margarines. Modern oils are a different product.

Cooking seed oils generate toxic compounds TRUE BUT UNQUANTIFIED

Heating at 160-200 degrees C generates 4-HNE, MDA, and acrolein — compounds that are cytotoxic and genotoxic in isolated models. But oral ingestion of cooked seed oils in clinical trials doesn't produce measurable systemic harm at normal cooking volumes. Human ALDH enzymes and glutathione pathways handle normal home-cooking exposure.

The legitimate exception: repeatedly reused deep-frying oil at commercial scale. This is a meaningfully different exposure than your stir-fry.

The omega-6 to omega-3 ratio is critical WRONG

Human stable isotope data shows absolute EPA/DHA intake determines tissue incorporation, regardless of background LA levels. High LA intake doesn't suppress omega-3 benefits when absolute omega-3 intake is sufficient. Reducing seed oils without simultaneously increasing omega-3 intake produces zero measurable clinical benefit. The ratio is a distraction from the real lever: eat enough omega-3.

Stop worrying about the tablespoon of canola oil in your stir-fry. Start taking 1-2g of EPA+DHA omega-3 daily. That single change does more for your inflammation profile than eliminating every seed oil in your kitchen.

Fifteen human RCTs confirm that dietary omega-6 from seed oils doesn't raise inflammation markers. What actually matters is your absolute omega-3 intake — not your omega-6 to omega-3 ratio.

Seed oils aren't the poison — but they're not saving your life either.

Think of seed oils like salt on a highway in winter. The anti-seed-oil crowd says the salt is destroying the road. The pro-seed-oil crowd says salt prevents accidents. Both are partly right — salt does corrode infrastructure over decades, and it does reduce crashes when applied correctly. But if your car is sliding, the issue isn't the salt on the road. It's the ice, the speed, and the tyres. Seed oils aren't the road salt everyone should panic about — the ultra-processed food system they travel in is the real surface condition.

  1. What the data actually shows: Eating more omega-6 from seed oils does not raise inflammation markers in human trials. The biochemical pathway (linoleic acid to arachidonic acid to inflammation) is real on paper but capped at 0.2% conversion in your body. Fifteen RCTs confirm this.
  2. The part that's backwards: The omega-6 to omega-3 ratio is a distraction. What actually matters is your absolute EPA+DHA intake. High seed oil consumption doesn't suppress omega-3 benefits when you're getting enough omega-3. The ratio obsession is based on outdated biochemistry.
  3. What to actually do about it: Take 1-2g EPA+DHA daily (fish oil or algae). Don't deep-fry in reused oil. Stop citing the Sydney Diet Heart Study without mentioning the trans-fat confound. Your home cooking oil is not the problem — the ultra-processed food matrix around it is.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

CONVICTION: MODERATE

This topic has four independent sub-questions with different evidence levels. The certainty that seed oils are universally harmful is not supported by human evidence. The certainty that they're completely benign is also unwarranted — the mortality neutrality and the reused-oil oxidation question deserve ongoing scrutiny.

HIGH: Inflammation claim falsified by 15+ human RCTs

MODERATE: CVD event reduction real, but zero mortality benefit

MODERATE: Cooking oxidation chemistry proven, human dose-response unknown

HIGH: Absolute omega-3 intake matters, not the ratio

What would change this to HIGH
A large, long-duration RCT using modern, trans-fat-free seed oils showing both non-fatal event reduction AND all-cause mortality benefit. Additionally, quantified safety thresholds for dietary 4-HNE/MDA accumulation in human endothelial tissue above hepatic clearance capacity. Both are missing from the current evidence base.
What would change the inflammation verdict
A multi-center metabolic ward crossover study (N>100) where 20% of daily calories from seed oils raises CRP, IL-6, and F2-isoprostanes in a dose-dependent, sustained manner — controlling for baseline omega-3 status and FADS genetics. That study does not exist.

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The Conflict

The Debate

Do seed oils reduce heart disease or not?

Hooper 2020 Cochrane (15 RCTs, N~59,000)

PUFA replacement for saturated fat reduces combined cardiovascular events by 21% (RR 0.79). Marklund 2019 (30 cohorts, N=68,659): higher circulating LA linked to 22% lower CV mortality.

vs

Ramsden 2013 (Sydney Diet Heart, Minnesota)

Safflower oil/margarine replacement increased all-cause mortality (HR 1.62) and CV mortality (HR 1.70). These are alarming findings that seed oil advocates rarely address.

The historical trials used 1960s-70s margarines containing trans fats — a confound that fundamentally undermines their applicability to modern cooking oils. But the mortality-event divergence in modern trials (fewer events, no fewer deaths) is a genuine scientific puzzle that hasn't been resolved.

Real World vs Lab

Honest Limitations

The mortality-event divergence is real and unexplained

Reducing non-fatal cardiovascular events without reducing deaths is a genuine scientific puzzle. The Cochrane review can't explain it. Dismissing it as a statistical artifact is intellectually dishonest — it needs to be watched as more modern RCT data accumulates.

Genetic variation changes individual risk

FADS1/FADS2 polymorphisms mean the 0.2% LA-to-AA conversion rate is a population average. Certain African descent cohorts show markedly higher delta-5-desaturase activity — their personal risk from high LA intake may be genuinely elevated. Generalized dietary advice misses this.

UPF confounding is nearly impossible to separate

High seed oil intake in population studies is inseparable from high ultra-processed food intake, low fiber intake, and hypercaloric food environments. The anti-seed-oil movement identified a real population signal — they've misattributed it to the oil rather than the food matrix that carries it.

The Nuance

The Nuance

Seed oil nuance

The seed oil problem is mostly an ultra-processed food problem. Hall 2019 showed that people spontaneously eat 508 calories more per day on ultra-processed food diets — and seed oils are a ubiquitous ingredient in those products. But the overconsumption is driven by the food matrix (refined carbs, absent fiber, disrupted satiety signals), not the oil in isolation.

Both extremes are wrong. The "seed oils are poison" camp ignores that 15+ human RCTs found zero inflammation increase. The "seed oils are health food" camp ignores that mortality doesn't improve when you swap saturated fat for PUFAs. The honest position is in the middle: they're a neutral cooking medium that becomes problematic mainly when reused at high heat in commercial settings, and the real action item is eating enough omega-3.

Key References

Hooper L, et al. (2020) — Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 15 RCTs, N~59,000. PUFA substitution for SFA: 21% CV event reduction (RR 0.79); all-cause mortality neutral (RR 0.96).
Marklund M, et al. (2019) — Circulation. 30 prospective cohorts, N=68,659. Higher circulating LA: 22% lower CV mortality (HR 0.78).
Innes JK & Calder PC (2018) — Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes & Essential Fatty Acids. Systematic review: high LA intake produces no increase in CRP, IL-6, or TNF-alpha.
Ramsden CE, et al. (2013) — BMJ. Sydney Diet Heart Study: safflower oil/margarine replacement increased mortality (HR 1.62). Trans-fat confound in intervention.
Chen Y, et al. (2019) — 6-month double-blind RCT. Heated corn oil vs peanut oil: no significant difference in fasting lipids, glucose, insulin, or hs-CRP.

Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

68 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

Where this sits — Nutrition

Distraction Commonly overestimated

Most people overestimate this. No interventional evidence that avoiding seed oils improves health outcomes.

What actually matters:
Worth it? Probably not worth your attention. Focus on the big rocks.

Action ROI

Is this worth your time, money, effort, risk, and trust for this goal? Different from Verdict Score (evidence strength) and Leverage Map (relative importance) — Action ROI is the worth-it call once friction is priced in.

Action ROI score
25/100 Poor ROI Trust grade B
No — focus on total caloric balance, diet quality, and protein. The 'avoid seed oils' action is high-effort, no-benefit.
Time
High
Money
Medium
Effort
High
Risk
Medium
Why this score
Why it didn’t score higher
Best for
Lower ROI if
Minimum effective dose
Not applicable — the intervention itself is unsupported. The minimum action is to stop spending attention on the question.
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