willascend123
Iron
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- Jan 19, 2026
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this thread explores the correlation between sunburning and skin cancer rates to seed oil.
Modern diets are way higher in omega-6-rich oils like soybean, corn, cottonseed, sunflower, safflower, and canola oil. These are high in linoleic acid, a polyunsaturated fat that’s more prone to oxidation.
Since UV creates oxidative stress in the skin, the theory is:
High seed oil intake → more omega-6 PUFA in skin/tissues → more lipid oxidation under UV → more inflammation/sunburn damage → possibly higher long-term skin cancer risk.
There’s also a direct correlation between seed oil consumption and skin cancer rates, as seen on graph
There’s animal evidence that omega-6-heavy diets can worsen UV-induced skin tumors, while omega-3s seem protective in some studies also omega-3 supplementation has been shown to raise sunburn threshold, which shows diet can affect UV response.
in conclusion stop being a retarted goy and slurping processed seed oils unless you want to look like a lobster and die of skin cancer
repping is free
Modern diets are way higher in omega-6-rich oils like soybean, corn, cottonseed, sunflower, safflower, and canola oil. These are high in linoleic acid, a polyunsaturated fat that’s more prone to oxidation.
Since UV creates oxidative stress in the skin, the theory is:
High seed oil intake → more omega-6 PUFA in skin/tissues → more lipid oxidation under UV → more inflammation/sunburn damage → possibly higher long-term skin cancer risk.
There’s also a direct correlation between seed oil consumption and skin cancer rates, as seen on graph
There’s animal evidence that omega-6-heavy diets can worsen UV-induced skin tumors, while omega-3s seem protective in some studies also omega-3 supplementation has been shown to raise sunburn threshold, which shows diet can affect UV response.
in conclusion stop being a retarted goy and slurping processed seed oils unless you want to look like a lobster and die of skin cancer
repping is free
