grilledsalmon Omega 3 Fatty Acids: The Benefits of Fish Oil
from woodleywonderworks

I’m sure you’ve heard before that we should eat fish on a regular basis. Besides being an excellent source of protein, fish contain the omega-3 fatty acids docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). These fatty acids are considered essential because they’re necessary for human health. The body can’t make them – you have to get them through food.

In modern diets, there are relatively few sources of omega-3 fatty acids. They’re found mainly in the fat of cold water fish such as salmon, sardines, herring, mackerel, black cod, and bluefish.

By contrast, sources of omega-6 essential fatty acids are numerous in the modern diets. Refined vegetable oils, such as soy oil, contain omega-6 and are used in most of the snack foods, cookies, crackers, and sweets in the American diet as well as in fast foods.

Omega-6 fatty acids tend to increase inflammation, blood clotting, and cell proliferation, while omega-3 fatty acids tend to decrease those functions.

Both omega-3’s and 6’s must be in balance in order to maintain optimum health. But the modern diet in America tends more towards the supply of omega-6 fatty acids and less of the omega-3’s. This dietary imbalance may explain the rise of many diseases such as asthma, heart disease, and many forms of cancer, all of which are believed to stem from inflammation in the body.

For this reason, many doctors advise increasing our dietary intake of omega-3 fatty acids.

Multiple studies have been done over the years that have demonstrated the numerous mental health benefits associated with increasing our omega-3 fatty acid intake.

Helps Reduce The Risk of Alzheimer’s

One of the benefits being associated with omega-3 fatty acids is that they’ve been shown to help reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s. Greg Cole, professor of medicine and neurology at UCLA and associate director of UCLA’s Alzheimer Disease Research Center, reported that the DHA found in fish oil increases the production of LR11. LR11 is a protein which has been found at reduced levels in Alzheimer’s patients. LR11 is known to destroy a protein that forms the “plaques” associated with Alzheimer’s.

Can Help Prevent Severe Mental Illness

A preliminary study of 81 patients in Austria suggest that severe mental illnesses such as Schizophrenia may be prevented by taking fish oil supplements.  Dr. Janet Wozniak of Harvard Medical School said the findings might reasonably cause psychiatrists to recommend fish oil to some patients because there are many known benefits and little risk.

Improvement in Depression Symptoms

In a 1998 report in the Journal of Affective Disorders, it was reported that significantly lower levels of omega-3′s were found in the red blood cell membranes of patients with depression.

Then in the May 1999 Archives of General Psychiatry, Andrew Stoll, M.D., and his colleagues reported a study of fish oil conducted on 30 manic-depressive patients. Sixty-four percent of those who took 10 grams of fish oil per day for four months reported a marked improvement in their symptoms. By contrast, only 19 percent of those who received the placebo benefited.

Curbing Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADD, ADHD)Symptoms with Fish Oil

Paul Montgomery, a researcher in the psychiatry department at the University of Oxford in England, found that “A lack of certain polyunsaturated fatty acids may contribute to dyslexia and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.” For the study, schoolchildren were given fish oil supplements rich in omega-3 essential fatty acids (EFAs) for a period of three months. The children showed significant improvements in behavior, reading, and spelling.

Says Montgomery. “I think supplementation with omega 3′s is the only sensible way forward. One gram per day seems right for most children.”

Can Fish Make you Smarter?

In a Norwegian study, about 2,030 people in their early 70s reported their fish consumption and took various mental skills tests. People who reported eating on average at least a third of an ounce of fish per day outscored those who skimped on fish.

In another related study, Dutch researchers took blood samples from 800 men and women aged 50-70. They also were given mental skills tests at the study’s start and again three years later. Test scores were lower on the follow-up test but the drop was gentlest in people with the highest blood levels of omega-3 fatty acids at the study’s start.

Other Health Benefits of Fish Oil and Omega-3’s

Besides mental health benefits, there are many other health related benefits of consuming fish oil and omega-3’s, such as:

  • decreases risk of arrhythmia (abnormal heartbeats),
  • decreases triglyceride levels
  • slows the growth rate of atherosclerotic plaque
  • lowers blood pressure (slightly)
  • reduces chance of a stroke
  • reduces chance of death in people with cardiovascular disease
  • reduce symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)
  • may help slow the progression of colon cancer
  • help prevent the development of prostate cancer
  • protects against the development and progression of retinopathy
  • reduces inflammation

Intake Recommendations

The American Heart Association recommends that we eat a variety of (preferably fatty) fish at least twice a week. Check out Fish 101 for specific consumption recommendations.

When it comes to supplementation, there currently is no recommendation but the Food and Drug Administration classifies three grams per day as “safe”. According to the American Heart Association, people taking more than 3 grams of omega-3 fatty acids from capsules should do so only under a physician’s care. High intakes could cause excessive bleeding in some people.

Because of the potential for side effects and interactions with medications, dietary supplements should be taken only under the supervision of a knowledgeable health care provider.

Additional Resources On Fish Oil

Fish and Omega-3 Fatty Acids

Fish Oil Improves Mental Health

Fish Oil to Treat Depression?

Alternative ADHD Treatment: Fish Oil

Related Posts:

brain food, essential fatty acids, fatty acids, fish oil, omega 3, omega 3 fatty acids

Below are recent link-ups to useful information I found on the web that deal with our brain.

How Big Is Your Brain? Its Size May Protect You From Memory Loss – ScienceDaily (Apr. 17, 2008) — From autopsies, researchers have long known that some people die with sharp minds and perfect memories, but their brains riddled with the plaques and tangles of Alzheimer’s disease. New research shows that those people have a larger part of the brain called the hippocampus.

The Health Dangers of Aspartame – An analysis done using MEDLINE showed that 92% of non-industry sponsored studies reported one or more problems with aspartame in terms of its effects on health. These studies reported a range of side effects including fibromyalgia, brain tumors, memory loss, lymphoma, leukemia, and peripheral nerve cancer. Headaches and migraine symptoms are one of the most common side effects of aspartame.

25 Surprising Ways You Are Harming your Brain – Taking hard drugs, not wearing a helmet during a drag race and snorting paint are of course harmful to your brain and might even be deadly in some cases. But did you know that getting too much sleep, not having any friends and not reading food labels is also harmful to your brain? Read on for 25 surprising ways you’re not protecting yourself the way you should

Tuna and Eggs Keep Your Brain Big – As if wrinkles weren’t bad enough, turns out our brains tend to shrivel as we age, too. Could eggs and tuna be the key to less shrinkage?

Do People Only Use 10 Percent Of Their Brains? – Though an alluring idea, the “10 percent myth” is so wrong it is almost laughable, says neurologist Barry Gordon at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Loneliness Affects How The Brain Operates – ScienceDaily (Feb. 17, 2009) — Social isolation affects how people behave as well as how their brains operate, a study at the University of Chicago shows.

Related Posts:

How Big Is Your Brain Buffer?

Brain Food

Fit Nuns With Sharp Brains

How to Prevent Alzheimer’s and Other Dementias

Related Posts:

alzheimer, alzheimers, brain exercise, brain fitness, brain food, Brain Games, brain health, memory tips, online brain games

brainconnectionsabcnews thumb Brain Links Feb 4, 2009Starting this week, The Online Brain Games Blog will be posting on a regular basis links to sites which offer some new and or interesting information regarding our brain.

So, here we go with our first installment..

  • According to BBC News, UK experts have discovered that the most common form of dementia, Alzheimer’s may be related to type II diabetes.  Dr Victoria King, of the charity Diabetes UK, said:

“This study is in its early stages but it is interesting because it suggests that insulin, alongside drugs that help the body use insulin more effectively, may protect against the underlying biological mechanisms associated with the development of Alzheimer’s disease.”

  • Mark Sisson over at the Daily Apple provides a list of the Best Brain Foods. These are excellent foods that enhance hormone production, brain chemistry, memory, mood, and cognition. He likes to consider these foods as brainiac batteries.
  • Vitamin D has been found to be a good mental aid according to US and UK researchers. Found in fish and produced by sun exposure, Vitamin D can help stave off the mental decline that can affect people in old age, a study has suggested.
  • Get this,  Looking Away May Help You Face Mental Challenges.  Tis true according to an article I came across in Sedmagazine.

Related Posts:

alzheimer, brain fitness, brain food, dementia, online brain games

You’ve probably heard that an apple a day keeps the doctor away, right?  Well a recent study suggests that a couple of apples a day might keep the neurologist away.

“Apples have just the right dose of antioxidants to raise levels of acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter that’s essential to memory and tends to decline with age,” says Tom Shea, PhD, director of the University of Massachusetts Lowell Center for Cellular Neurobiology and Neurodegeneration Research.

Antioxidants help preserve memory by protecting brain cells against damage from free radicals. A study on mice at Cornell University found that the quercetin in apples may protect brain cells from the kind of free radical damage that may lead to Alzheimer’s disease.

A study Shea coauthored with Amy Chan, PhD, published last year in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, found that mice suffering from the equivalent of normal human age-related memory loss or early Alzheimer’s disease got a memory boost when they consumed a daily dose of apple juice. After just 1 month, those mice did a far superior job on a maze, which tests short-term memory, than the animals that didn’t get the drink.

Besides helping your memory and protecting your brain, apples have also been shown to lower your risk for many cancers.

Shea recommends consuming two-to-three apples or one-to-two 8 ounce glasses of apple juice each day.

References:

New Thinking on Memory

10 Health Benefits of Apples

Related Posts:

alzheimers, antioxidants, apple juice, apples, brain, brain fitness, brain food, fitness, health, how to improve memory, improve memory, memory
Improve the web with Nofollow Reciprocity.