 Those that tend to profit from coconut oil claim it has miraculous power, curing everything from cancer to jock itch. Perhaps the boldest claim may be as a potential cure for Alzheimer's based on a series of anecdotes in one study. Study of the ketogenic agent AC-1202. You can certainly make money selling 20-pound buckets of coconut oil, but even more selling some kind of patented supplement, which is what this is. It's a concentrated form of the medium-chain fatty acids in coconut oil purported to be the active ingredient. At first it looked like it was working, but by the end of the study any effect it had disappeared. Though there was one genetic subgroup where it appeared to be working better, but when that group was properly randomized, even that effect disappeared. So the only such study ever done on concentrated coconut oil components found little effect, and no studies have ever been done whatsoever on Alzheimer's and coconut oil itself. As the Alzheimer's Association put it, there's no scientific evidence that coconut oil helps with Alzheimer's. And hey, the coconut oil promise has been around for more than three years. If the administration of coconut oil was indeed beneficial, it would presumably be shouted from every mountaintop, and not just the mountains that sell coconut oil. And that's all we know so far. Why don't we know more? There have been over a thousand articles published on coconut oil in the medical literature. The problem is there are studies like this. Did you know coconut oil enhances tomato-corotanoid tissue accumulation compared to safflower oil in the Mongolian gerbil? It includes nuggets like this. The testes of the coconut oil-fed animals weighed significantly less than those of the safflower oil-fed animals. Who says coconut oil isn't effective? How else are you going to shrink the testicles of Mongolian gerbils?