Carousel Studio

Repurpose X Threads into LinkedIn & Instagram Carousels

Canvas & Ratio

Choose your destination platform format


Layout Template

Choose a content structure for your slides


Preset Themes


Typography & Sizing

Title Font Size36px
Body Font Size18px
Header & Footer Size12px

Brand Kit Customization

AGENCY

Configure brand assets for headers & footers

MULTI-PROFILES (AGENCY)
AGENCY
SAVE PRESETS (AGENCY)

Outro Slide CTA

Customize your closing call-to-action slide

#1
#2
#3

Background Pattern

Source Content

Build Your Carousel

Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

Drag Post #1
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

The recent story about seed oils and colon cancer caused some controversy. However, the evidence that seed oils cause cancer has been around for decades. It's mostly due to the linoleic acid in seed oils. And saturated fats are protective. ๐Ÿงต

Apply Image
Drag Post #2
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

In the 1960s, Japanese researchers investigated the effect of linoleic acid on the growth of sarcoma (tumors) transplanted onto rats. Linoleic acid is a major component of seed oils.

Drag Post #3
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Rats were divided into four groups. All were fed a standard lab rat diet for three weeks. The researchers then transplanted tumors onto the rats and began the experiment.

Drag Post #4
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

The surface area of the tumors was almost three times larger in animals consuming linoleic acid compared to animals consuming a fat-free diet. The tumors were significantly larger in all rat groups consuming fat.

Apply Image
Drag Post #5
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

The researchers concluded that linoleic acid is required to grow this tumor. The three most commonly used cooking oils in the US are: Soybean oil: ~50% linoleic acid Canola oil: ~20% linoleic acid Corn oil: ~50% linoleic acid

Apply Image
Drag Post #6
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

In another experiment, researchers examined the influence of linoleic acid on the effects of a chemical that increases cancer risk. They created eight identical experimental diets, except for the fat sources.

Drag Post #7
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Increasing linoleic acid increases mammary (breast) tumorigenesis, transforming normal cells into cancerous ones. The maximum carcinogenic effect was achieved when linoleic acid was 4.4% of calories.

Apply Image
Drag Post #8
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

A century ago, linoleic acid levels were well below the 4.4% range found to cause the maximum increase in cancer. Now, it accounts for approximately 7% of calories - a fact that may make control groups in recent human research unreliable...

Apply Image
Drag Post #9
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

High-fat diets with saturated fats donโ€™t accelerate cancer growth like linoleic acid. โ€œThese results are consistent with the hypothesis that tumor promotion by dietary fat is more a function of the type than the amount of fat ingested.โ€

Apply Image
Drag Post #10
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

In fact, some saturated fatty acids, like stearic acid, seem to protect against cancer. Stearic acid is found in beef, lamb, and cocoa fat. <a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/1744031563187150848/status/1847305753389826555" color="blue">x.com/17440315631871โ€ฆ</a>

Apply Image
Drag Post #11
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Researchers recorded multigenerational increases in breast cancer in rodents when a pregnant rodent had consumed a high corn oil diet. In some regards, the multigenerational carcinogenic effect was more substantial than that of estrogen.

Apply Image
Drag Post #12
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Researchers looked for a relationship between fats and breast cancer. They tracked a group of 60,000 women over four years. Women consuming the most PUFA were at a 20% higher risk of breast cancer than those consuming the least. Most PUFA comes from seed oils.

Apply Image
Drag Post #13
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

The American Heart Association conducted a trial in the 1960s examining the effect of seed oils on human health. They tracked the health of 800 men over eight years. The participants were split into two groups, each consuming a 40% fat diet.

Drag Post #14
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

One group consumed 10% of its total calories from PUFAs, while the other consumed 38% PUFAs, most of which were linoleic acid. The diets were the same (both 40% fat), except the second diet substituted seed oil for the traditional, more saturated fats.

Apply Image
Drag Post #15
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Cancer deaths were 80% higher in those consuming the high-seed oil diet at 8 years. Cancer deaths began to increase in the lower PUFA group after the dietary period ended, probably because the men began consuming more seed oils.

Apply Image
Drag Post #16
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

On the topic of colon cancer, the relationship between seed oils, inflammation, IBD, and cancer is enough to raise all sorts of red flags. <a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/1744031563187150848/status/1867995849764024624" color="blue">x.com/17440315631871โ€ฆ</a>

Drag Post #17
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Some of the fatty acids in seed oils are considered essential, which may be true. But the amount consumed these days is vastly more than needed to prevent a deficiency. <a target="_blank" href="https://twitter.com/1744031563187150848/status/1797280125114884155" color="blue">x.com/17440315631871โ€ฆ</a>

Drag Post #18
Master Metabolism
@lowmegatron

Sources

Apply Image