The Peter Attia Drive

#380 ‒ The seed oil debate: are they uniquely harmful relative to other dietary fats? | Layne Norton, Ph.D.

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Jan 19, 2026
Layne Norton, Ph.D., a nutrition scientist and accomplished power athlete, dives deep into the seed oil debate. He argues that seed oils aren't uniquely harmful, focusing on the evidence surrounding LDL oxidation and atherosclerosis. Norton critiques the common anti-seed oil claims while highlighting biases in scientific studies. He also discusses the influence of industrial processing and ancestral diets, offering practical dietary guidance for healthier choices—emphasizing that broader lifestyle factors are more pivotal to health than just dietary fats.
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INSIGHT

Linoleic Acid Does Not Drive Inflammation

  • Linoleic acid intake doesn't reliably increase arachidonic acid or inflammation in humans.
  • Population and tissue studies often associate higher linoleic acid with lower CVD risk.
INSIGHT

Particle Number Beats Per-Particle Oxidation

  • Oxidized LDL is more atherogenic per particle, but most oxidation occurs inside the arterial intima, not plasma.
  • PUFAs lower particle number and reduce retention/aggregation despite higher per-particle oxidation risk.
INSIGHT

Bonfire Analogy: Fewer Sparks, Less Fire

  • Layne's 'bonfire' analogy: fewer sparks (particles) from a smaller bonfire (lower ApoB) reduce forest-fire risk even if sparks are slightly more flammable.
  • Net risk falls with fewer particles despite higher per-particle vulnerability.
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