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The Truth About Eating Eggs

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THE TRUTH ABOUT EATING EGGS

By Jessica Brown
23rd April 2020

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190916-are-eggs-good-for-you

Are eggs helpful to our health… or a cause of heart disease? BBC Future examines the
evidence.
I have a question!!!! (I have a doubt=WRONG)
As many countries urge populations to stay at home, many of us are paying more attention to our
diets and how the food we eat can support our health. To help sort out the fact from the fiction,
BBC Future is updating some of our most popular nutrition stories from our archive.
foucaz arkaiv
Our colleagues at BBC Good Food are focusing on practical solutions for ingredient swaps,
nutritious storecupboard recipes and all aspects of cooking and eating during lockdown.

If there was such a thing as a perfect food, eggs would be a contender. They’re readily available,
easy to cook, affordable and packed with protein.

“The egg is meant to be something that has all the right ingredients to grow an organism, so
obviously it’s very nutrient dense,” says Christopher Blesso, associate professor of nutritional
science at the University of Connecticut in the US.

Eating eggs alongside other food can help our bodies absorb more vitamins, too. For example,
one study found that adding an egg to salad can increase how much vitamin E we get from the
salad.

But for decades, eating eggs has also been controversial due to their high cholesterol content –
which some studies have linked to an increased risk of heart disease. One egg yolk contains
around 185 milligrams of cholesterol, which is more than half of the 300mg daily amount of
cholesterol that the US dietary guidelines recommended until recently.

Additionally, there have been scientifically unsupported claims the eggs can guard against
coronavirus, or that they have even been responsible for its outbreak. There has even been one
bizarre outlandish theory that spitting in an egg before cooking it creates antibodies which can guard
against the disease. (There's no evidence to support this.) /ɡɑːd/

Does that mean eggs, rather than being an ideal food, might actually be doing us harm?

Cholesterol, a yellowish fat produced in our liver and intestines, can be found in every one of our
body’s cells. We normally think of it as “bad”. But cholesterol is a crucial building block in our
cell membranes. It also is needed for the body to make vitamin D, and the hormones testosterone

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and oestrogen.

We produce all the cholesterol we need on our own, but it’s also found in animal produce we
consume, including beef, prawns and eggs, as well as cheese and butter.
/prɔːn/ small shrimps
Cholesterol is transported around our body by lipoprotein molecules in the blood. Every person
has a different combination of various types of lipoproteins, and our individual make-up plays a
role in determining our risk of developing heart disease.

Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol – referred to as “bad” cholesterol – is transported


from the liver to arteries and body tissues. Researchers say that this can result in a build-up of
cholesterol in the blood vessels and increase the risk of cardiovascular disease.

But researchers haven’t definitively linked consumption of cholesterol to an increased risk of


cardiovascular disease. As a result, US dietary guidelines no longer have a cholesterol restriction;
nor does the UK. Instead, emphasis is placed on limiting how much saturated fat we consume,
which can increase the risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Foods containing trans fats, in
particular, increase our LDL levels. Although some trans fats occur naturally in animal products,
most are made artificially and are found in highest levels in margarines, snacks, and some
deep-fried and baked foods, such as pastry, doughnuts and cake. (Read more about whether diets
encouraging people to eat more saturated fat are good for you.)

Meanwhile, along with prawns, eggs are the only food high in cholesterol that are low in
saturated fat.

“While the cholesterol in eggs is much higher than in meat and other animal products, saturated
fat increases blood cholesterol. This has been demonstrated by lots of studies for many years,”
says Maria Luz Fernandez, professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Connecticut in
the US, whose latest research found no relationship between eating eggs and an increased risk of
cardiovascular disease.

The truth about eating eggs


The discussion on the health effects of eggs has shifted partly because our bodies can compensate
for the cholesterol we consume.

“There are systems in place so that, for most people, dietary cholesterol isn’t a problem,” says
Elizabeth Johnson, research associate professor of nutritional sciences at Tufts University in
Boston, US.

In a 2015 review of 40 studies, Johnson and a team of researchers couldn’t find any conclusive
evidence on the relationship between dietary cholesterol and heart disease.

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“Humans have good regulation when consuming dietary cholesterol, and will make less
cholesterol themselves,” she says.

And when it comes to eggs, cholesterol may pose even less of a health risk. Cholesterol is more
harmful when oxidised in our arteries, but oxidisation doesn’t happen to the cholesterol in eggs,
says Blesso.

“When cholesterol is oxidised, it may be more inflammatory, and there are all kinds of
antioxidants in eggs that protect it from being oxidised,” he says.

Also, some cholesterol may actually be good for us. High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol
travels to the liver, where it’s broken down and removed from the body. HDL is thought to have
a protective effect against cardiovascular disease by preventing cholesterol from building up in
the blood. accumulating

“People should be concerned about cholesterol that circulates in their blood, which is the one that
leads to heart disease,” says Fernandez.

What matters is the ratio of HDL to LDL in our bodies, as elevated HDL counteracts the effects
of LDL. opposes

However, while most of us are able to buffer the cholesterol we consume with the cholesterol we
synthesise in our livers, Blesso says around a third of us will experience an increase in blood
cholesterol by 10% to 15% after consuming it.

Trials have found that lean and healthy people are more likely to see an increase in LDL after
eating eggs. Those who are overweight, obese or diabetic will see a smaller increase in LDL and
more HDL molecules, Blesso says. So, if you’re healthier to begin with, eggs potentially could
have a more negative effect than if you’re overweight – but if you’re healthier, you’re also more
likely to have good HDL levels, so an increase in LDL probably isn’t very harmful.

Research published earlier this year, though, challenged the recent consensus that eggs pose no
harm to our health. Researchers looked at data from 30,000 adults followed for an average of 17
years and found that each additional half an egg per day was significantly linked to a higher risk
of heart disease and death. (They controlled for the subjects’ diet patterns, overall health and
physical activity to try to isolate the effects of eggs.)

“We found that, for every additional 300mg cholesterol person consumed, regardless of the food
it came from, they had a 17% increased risk of cardiovascular disease, and 18% increased risk of
all-cause mortality,” says Norrina Allen, one of the study’s authors and associate professor of
preventive medicine at Northwestern University in Illinois, US.

“We also found that each half egg per day led to a 6% increased risk of heart disease and 8%

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increased risk of mortality.”

Despite the study being one of the largest of its kind to address this specific relationship between
eggs and heart disease, it was observational, giving no indication of cause and effect. It also
relied upon a single set of self-reported data – participants were asked what they ate over the
previous month or year, then followed up their health outcomes for up to 31 years. This means
the researchers only got a single snapshot of what the participants were eating, even though our
diets can change over time.

And the study conflicts with past results. Numerous studies suggest eggs are good for heart
health. One previous analysis of half a million adults in China, published in 2018, even found the
exact opposite: egg consumption was associated with lower risk of heart disease. Those who ate
eggs every day had an 18% lower risk of death from heart disease and 28% lower risk of stroke
death compared to those who didn’t eat eggs.
/tiːz aʊt/: to try to get information or understand a meaning that is hidden or not clear
Like the previous study, it too was observational – meaning it’s impossible to tease out cause and
effect. (Do healthier adults in China simply eat more eggs, or do the eggs make them healthier?).
That, of course, may be a big part of the confusion.

Good egg
/ˌriː.ɪɡˈnaɪt/
While these studies have reignited the debate on the impact of cholesterol in eggs on our health,
we do know some ways in which eggs could affect our risk of disease.
/kow·leen/ colina
One way is through a compound in eggs called choline, which may help protect us against
Alzheimer’s disease. It also protects the liver. (Find out if eggs are a good way of stopping a
hangover.)

But it may have negative effects, too. Choline is metabolised by gut microbiota into a molecule
called TMO, which is then absorbed into people’s livers and converted to TMAO, a molecule
associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Blasso has wondered if eating a lot of
choline from eggs could lead to elevations of TMAO: he found studies where people were
observed to have elevated TMAO levels up to 12 hours after eating eggs.

Research measuring egg consumption and TMAO has so far only found transient increases in
TMAO. However, TMAO is measured as a marker for heart disease only at a baseline level,
which can be detected when people are fasting. Blasso likens this to how our blood sugar levels
increase temporarily after eating carbohydrates, but elevated blood sugar levels are only
associated with diabetes when these levels are continuous.

This may be because when we eat eggs, we might only get choline’s beneficial effects, he says.

“The problem is when, instead of being absorbed into the blood, choline continues to the large

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intestine, where it can become TMA and then TMAO,” says Fernandez.

“But in eggs, choline is absorbed and doesn’t go to the large intestine, so it doesn’t increase the
risk of heart disease.”

Meanwhile, scientists are beginning to understand other health benefits of eggs. Egg yolks are
one of the best sources of lutein, a pigment that has been linked to better eyesight and lower risk
of eye disease, for example.

“There are two types of lutein found the retina of the eye, where it can protect the retina from
light damage by working as a blue light filter, as exposure to light makes the eye deteriorate,”
says Johnson.

While researchers are a long way from understanding why eggs affect us differently, the vast
majority of recent research suggests they pose no risk to our health, and are much more likely to
provide health benefits.

Even so, having eggs for breakfast every day probably isn’t healthiest option, either – at least as
it’s recommended we have a varied diet… rather than put all our eggs in one basket.

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===
THE HEALTHY WAY TO EAT EGGS
-Eat well
https://www.nhs.uk/live-well/eat-well/eggs-nutrition/

Eggs are a good choice as part of a healthy, balanced diet. As well as being a source of protein,
they also contain vitamins and minerals.

Eggs and your diet


Eggs are nutritious – they're a source of:

protein
vitamin D
vitamin A
vitamin B2
vitamin B12
folate

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iodine

How many eggs is it safe to eat?


There is no recommended limit on how many eggs people should eat.

Eggs can be enjoyed as part of a healthy, balanced diet, but it's best to cook them without adding
salt or fat. For example:

boiled or poached, without added salt


scrambled without butter and using low-fat milk instead of cream
Frying eggs can increase their fat content by around 50%.

Eggs and cholesterol


Having high cholesterol levels in our blood increases our risk of heart disease.

Although eggs contain some cholesterol, the amount of saturated fat we eat has more of an effect
on the amount of cholesterol in our blood than the cholesterol we get from eating eggs.

If a GP or health professional has told you to watch your cholesterol levels, your priority should
be to cut down on saturated fat across your diet. You can get advice in Eat less saturated fat.

If you are eating a balanced diet, you only need to cut down on eggs if you have been told to do
so by a GP or dietitian.

Raw eggs and food poisoning


There have been improved food safety controls in recent years. So infants, children, pregnant
women and elderly people can now safely eat raw or lightly cooked hen eggs, or foods containing
them. Make sure that the eggs you buy have a British Lion stamp mark.

But these groups of people should still avoid raw or lightly cooked eggs that are:

not British Lion stamped


not hen eggs (e.g. duck or quail eggs)
from outside the UK
They should have these eggs cooked through until the white and yolk are solid. This is because
these groups are more vulnerable to infection and likely to have more serious symptoms of food
poisoning.

People who have a severely weakened immune system and who are on a medically supervised
diet prescribed by health professionals should cook all eggs thoroughly.

When eating raw or lightly cooked eggs, remember to:

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store eggs safely in a cool, dry place, such as the refrigerator
clean all work surfaces, dishes and utensils, and wash your hands thoroughly before and after
handling eggs
avoid using eggs that are past their best-before dates
Cooking eggs thoroughly is the safest option if you are still concerned about food poisoning.

Foods containing raw eggs


Any of the following foods can contain raw or lightly cooked eggs:

mousses
soufflés
homemade mayonnaise
hollandaise and béarnaise sauces
salad dressings
ice cream
icing
tiramisu
baked alaska
Italian meringue

If you're concerned about raw egg when eating out or buying food, ask the person serving you if
it contains raw egg and if so, if the eggs have the British Lion stamp.

Avoiding the spread of bacteria


There can be bacteria on the shell as well as inside the egg, which can spread very easily to other
foods, as well as to hands, utensils and worktops.

These tips can help avoid the spread of bacteria:

keep eggs away from other foods – both when they are in the shell and after you have cracked
them
be careful not to splash egg onto other foods, worktops or dishes
always wash your hands thoroughly with warm water and soap, and then dry them after touching
or working with eggs
clean surfaces, dishes and utensils thoroughly using warm soapy water after handling eggs
do not use eggs with damaged shells, because dirt or bacteria might have got inside them
Find out more about how to store food safely

'Best before' dates of eggs


Eggs have a shelf life of 28 days (from the date they were laid to their "best before" date).

Page last reviewed: 25 January 2021


Next review due: 25 January 2024

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