Have you ever  asked the question, "are saturated fats bad for you?" Most people  without a moment's hesitation would repeat the mantra that saturated  fats are bad because they cause the clogging of the arteries and weight  gain. But what if there was a saturated fats that actually may be good  for you and could, in turn, help you with weight loss? This possible "good" saturated fat is coconut oil.
Despite the claims that coconut oil is a saturated fat that is bad for you, coconut oil might be a fat burner and help you increase your metabolism in the right circumstances. They  key reason is that it's rich in medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs). Most  vegetable oils are made up of long-chain fatty acids that are stored as  bodyfat. MCTs aren't stored and are burned almost immediately as fuel.  They require little digestion and are quickly absorbed by the body,  which also heightens the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins--A, D, E and  K--and many minerals, especially calcium and magnesium.
 In addition, coconut oil has been know to put up some mechanisms in  place to help you cut your appetite, and because it has a lot of lauric  acid, it speeds up the body's thermogenic rate--that is, how fast you  burn calories. Lauric acid is the key to many of the benefits in coconut  milk.
However, many people are not familiar with Lauric acid, but the  body's most abundant source of it is in breast milk, with which it  shares health giving properties.
There is also evidence that coconut oil can accelerate fat-burning activities by stimulating the thyroid gland, which controls all the body's metabolic activities. Current data suggest that coconut oil raises the body's basal metabolic rate,  which is how well you burn calories at rest, while improving overall  metabolism. The bottom line here is that when you take MCTs instead of  long-chain triglycerides, you turn into a fat-burning machine and store a  lot less fat.
 Coconut oil has fewer calories than most other fats and oils. So you  don't have to use as much oil as you would when cooking with other oils.  Coconut oil does have roughly 120 calories in a tablespoon, so the key  to losing weight using coconut oil may be in substituting it in place of  other oils, not in addition. But again, it comes down to how well your  body uses the benefits of the coconut oil. If you have a poorly running  metabolism and digestion system, the benefits of taking coconut may be  muted anyway. 
 
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