WASHINGTON (AP) - Until now, trans fat didn't get the attention its infamous cousin, saturated fat, earned through government warnings and labels.
That's about to change, now that the government is requiring food labels to reveal exact levels of the artery clogger.
Doughnuts, french fries, crackers and fried chicken are just some of the tasty foods that include trans fat. But it's at least as dangerous to the heart as saturated fat - and many doctors consider it worse.
Food and Drug Administration regulations to be unveiled Wednesday will require nutrition labels to include a new line listing the amount of trans fat in each food right under the amount of saturated fat, say consumer advocates and industry representatives familiar with FDA's decision.
Add the two lines together to learn the total of heart-risky fats in every serving.
"It's a good first step," said Margo Wootan of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which petitioned FDA 10 years ago to make the change. "People will be able to compare different products and determine which ones are worse for their hearts."
Wootan said the comparisons won't be easy: The labels won't tell consumers how much a candy bar or doughnut counts against their daily allotment of total unhealthy fat. Nor will they bear a message FDA debated this spring - that trans fat consumption should be as low as possible.
In recent weeks, FDA Commissioner Mark McClellan has promised the change, first proposed in 1999. Agency officials wouldn't comment Tuesday.
The FDA has estimated that merely revealing trans fat content on labels would save between 2,000 and 5,600 lives a year, as people either chose healthier foods or manufacturers changed their recipes to leave out the damaging ingredient.
Food companies already are preparing. Frito-Lay has announced it is eliminating trans fat from its popular Doritos, Tostitos and Cheetos, and became the first major manufacturer to voluntarily begin adding trans fat content to the labels of other brands earlier this year.
Although FDA will allow companies to phase in the switch, consumers will see many revealing trans fat content within just a few months, said Tim Willard of the National Food Processors Association.
"Clearly this is going to be a major change to food labels, and it's going to help consumers who are seeking information about trans fat content of foods to find it," he said.
Saturated fat is found primarily in meat and other products containing animal fat. People are advised to eat no more than 20 grams a day, about 10 percent of calories.
Some surveys suggest trans fat comprises up to another 10 percent. Both types can increase the risk of heart disease, although some research suggests trans fat may be the worst culprit.
Trans fat is in numerous products, from meats and dairy products to pastries. The most common source is partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, where liquid oil is turned into a solid to protect against spoiling and maintain long-term flavor.
Typically, the harder a margarine or cooking fat, the more trans fat it includes. Soft, spreadable margarine in tubs, for instance, contains little if any trans fat, while stick margarine can contain a lot. In other foods, the only way consumers could tell which contained trans fat was to check the ingredient list for the word "hydrogenated."
The National Academy of Sciences, which sets nutrition levels, last year ruled that while eating some trans fat may be unavoidable, there is no safe level that it could set as an upper limit. So while product labels today list what percent of total calories a food offers in saturated fat, the new trans fat labels will won't.
FDA had considered putting a footnote on labels recommending eating only a little trans fat, but consumer testing found that had the unintended consequence of scaring people back to foods high in saturated fat, said Stephanie Childs of the Grocery Manufacturers of America, which lobbied against the move.
For now, FDA plans to do more research on how to educate consumers about heart-damaging fats so that they make better food choices, Childs said.