correlational
Analysis v1
Strong Support

When mice eat foods that contain certain broken-down fats called OXLAMs, their liver cells start having trouble making energy, their energy factories (mitochondria) make more copies of themselves, and some of the mitochondria’s DNA ends up floating in the wrong part of the cell.

9
Pro
0
Against

Evidence from Studies

Supporting (1)

9

Community contributions welcome

Scientists fed mice a diet high in damaged fats from linoleic acid and found that their liver mitochondria got weaker, made less energy, and leaked more DNA into the cell fluid—exactly what the claim says happens.

Contradicting (0)

0

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No contradicting evidence found

Gold Standard Evidence Needed

According to GRADE and EBM methodology, here is what ideal scientific evidence would look like to definitively prove or disprove this specific claim, ordered from strongest to weakest evidence.