Showing posts with label omega-3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label omega-3. Show all posts

Thursday, January 23, 2014

The Skinny on Fat

In the 1970s and 80s, fat was the bad boy of nutrition.  Since then, research has reminded us of so many of the “forgotten” good things about fat -- from the benefits of omega-3 fatty acids, to absorbing our fat-soluble vitamins and beyond.  As research goes on, more facts come to light to dispel our fears of this nutrient.

A few months ago, I reported that a Mediterranean diet rich in olive oil and nuts decreases the risk of cardiovascular disease by 30% compared to a low-fat diet.  Further analysis (1) of the data from this study (the PREDIMED study from Spain) found that the monounsaturated fat-rich Mediterranean diet also decreased diabetes risk by a third.  This is huge:  cardiovascular disease and diabetes are two of the biggest causes of death and morbidity in this country.  Focusing on low glycemic index foods like whole grains, legumes, fruits, and vegetables, as well as losing our fear of healthy fats like extra-virgin olive oil, can spell out huge health benefits.

Furthermore, a meta-analysis (a study of studies) published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2010 (2) tore down one of the most sacred cows of nutrition and health research:  the "evil" of saturated fat.  The authors found no association of saturated fat intake with cardiovascular disease or stroke in the best-designed nutritional studies available to date.  This is mind-boggling, since everyone "knows" that chomping on a cheeseburger will instantly make your arteries clog up.  The jury is still out. but it appears that the ratio of unsaturated fat (from sources like olive oil, fish oil, or nuts) to saturated fat is more important than the absolute amount of saturated fat.  Translated into English, this means that at least half of your dietary fat should come from these healthier sources.  One word of caution, though, is that omega-6-rich fats such as vegetable oil might actually be bad for the heart.
As we sort through all of this evidence. it looks like the best recommendations we have to date are:
  • Overall, a low-fat diet is not healthier for most people.
  • Balance saturated fat intake (meat, dairy, coconut oil) with healthier fats (olive oil, nuts, avocados).
  • Use vegetable oils sparingly (canola, corn, peanut oil).
  • Do all of this in the context of a varied, fiber-rich, low glycemic index eating pattern, such as the Mediterranean Diet.

1.  Ann Intern Med. 2014;160(1):1-10-10. doi:10.7326/M13-1725
2.  Am J Clin Nutr 2010;91:535–46.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Will Fat Kill You, or Make You Live Forever?

As you might expect, it depends on the kind of fat.  As I wrote about a few weeks ago, the standard advice from the 1970s and 80s about following a low-fat diet turned out to be less healthy than including "good" fats from foods like nuts and olive oil.  Another recent scientific paper from Australia, published in the British Medical Journal, further blows to top off the old dietary fats advice, showing that saturated fat may not be as bad as we thought it was.

A few decades ago, researchers started noticing a correlation between intake of saturated fats (from foods like meat, dairy products, and shortening) and cardiovascular disease.  The recommendation, therefore, was to replace these fats with healthier polyunsaturated fats from vegetable sources.  In this study, researchers examined data about 458 men, half of whom received advice to replace saturated fats with omega-6 oils from vegetable sources.  The other half (the control group) received no specific dietary advice.  After about seven years, it turned out that the death rate in the omega-6 group was 17.6%, versus 11.8% in the control group.  Heart disease rates were also 60% higher in the vegetable oil group.

Wait.  Take a look at those numbers.  Don't we all know that a saturated fat laden cheeseburger will just clog up our arteries as we're sitting there?  Isn't this why all the lard and shortening have been replaced with "healthy" vegetable oil for frying?

It turns out that not all polyunsaturated fats are created equal.  There are two major categories of PUFAs:  omega-6 and omega-3.  Ideally, the ratio of our intake of omega-6 to omega-3 should be about 2 to 1.  A higher intake of omega-3 fatty acids has been shown over and over again to decrease cardiovascular disease risk, and lower mortality rates.  However, the current ratio in America is about 20 to 1, omega-6 to omega-3.  This is a major reason why chronic degenerative diseases continue to escalate in this country.  Maybe it's those french fries that are killing us, not the burgers.

So what are we to do with this information?  No, this is not carte blanche to go and scarf down as much meat as you want; we still know that a plant-based eating pattern such as the Mediterranean diet is highly protective overall.  For cooking, use smaller amounts of healthy saturated fat, such as extra-virgin coconut oil.  Extra-virgin olive oil is also a good choice, as a source of monounsaturated fats (and yes, contrary to popular belief, you absolutely can cook with it).  A fish oil supplement is a must for most people, to ensure adequate omega-3 intake.  Skip deep-fried foods altogether, since the omega-6 fats in the vegetable oils may actually increase our mortality risk (either by themselves, or by transformation into trans fats).

The more we learn, the more we'll untangle which fats are good for us!

Use of dietary linoleic acid for secondary prevention of coronary heart disease and death: evaluation of recovered data from the Sydney Diet Heart Study and updated meta-analysis.  BMJ 2013; 346 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.e8707 (Published 5 February 2013).

Monday, June 10, 2013

Fish Oil is Dead... or Is It?

If you're a patient or a regular reader of my articles, you know that one supplement that I often recommend is fish oil -- a good source of omega-3 fatty acids.  These fats are essential to our health, because our bodies cannot make them from any other type of fat.  The many benefits of omega-3 fats include:

  • Cardiovascular health benefits
  • Immunomodulation
  • Anti-inflammatory effects
  • Psychological and behavioral health improvement
  • Improved bone density
A large study published recently in the New England Journal of Medicine (1) has called into serious question the well-established cardiovascular benefits of fish oil.  Italian researchers divided a group of over 12,000 subjects into two groups:  one received 1 gram of omega-3 fats from fish oil per day, the other 1 gram of placebo (olive oil).  These were high-risk patients:  people with multiple cardiovascular risk factors such as high cholesterol, type 2 diabetes, or even established atherosclerosis.  The outcome?  After 1 year, there was no difference in the rates of death, non-fatal heart attack, or stroke between the two groups.

What are we to conclude from this?  The sound-bite headlines trumpet "Fish Oil is Worthless!"  Some eminent cardiologists agree.  But let's peel back the layers, and examine the flaws in this otherwise large and impressive study.
  1.  Dose.  1 gram of omega-3 fats is not a high dose at all, especially in this population of high-risk patients.  For my patients with any cardiovascular risk factors, I recommend 1.5-2.5 grams of omega-3 fats per day.  And remember, a 1 gram (1000 mg) fish oil softgel only contains about 300 mg of omega-3s.  For cardiovascular health, 5-8 softgels per day are required.  An alternative would be to take a concentrated form of fish oil, or to use liquid cod liver oil.  I take about 2 teaspoons of cod liver oil daily, which supplies around 2.5 grams (2500 mg) of omega-3s.
  2. Quality.  There is a wide variability in the quality of fish oil products.  A pharmaceutical-grade form is best, which is screened for impurities, and has less chance of being rancid.  The form used in the study is not specified.
  3. Lab Values.  One of the main ways that omega-3 fats benefit the cardiovascular system is by lowering triglyceride levels -- data about patients' triglyceride levels were not included in the study.  Also, how well were the diabetic patients maintaining blood sugar control?  Poorly controlled blood sugar is a major risk factor that a little fish oil won't overcome.
  4. Choice of "Placebo."  A placebo (inactive pill) is necessary in research studies to compare to the active intervention, to account for the fact that people's expectations about receiving care can have a strong therapeutic effect.  This is know as the placebo effect.  But is olive oil a good choice as an inert comparison?  There is a mountain of research about the cardiovascular benefits of the Mediterranean Diet, whose foundation is daily olive oil use.  Just a few weeks ago, I wrote about the PREDIMED study, which found that an olive oil-supplemented Mediterranean diet resulted in a 30 percent decreased risk of cardiovascular disease
  5. Other Benefits of Omega-3 Fats.  Now granted, the list of other benefits was not being looked at in this study, but some commentators really threw the baby out with the bathwater on this point.  Cardiologist Eric Topol, MD, called fish oil a "no-go," a "nada effect," and even "implores" his patients to stop taking it.  Really?  That's quite an exercise in ignoring the large body of research on fish oil for multiple body systems.
As always, I urge you to look past the headlines, and consider the whole research picture.  Don't throw out your fish oil on the basis of this one flawed study.

Monday, December 3, 2012

Natural Medicine Myth #5: One-A-Day

This is a continuation of my series (in no particular order) on misperceptions in the field of natural medicine.  My previous articles focused on policosanolcinnamonsystemic candida, and acai berry.

Those of you who know my articles and recommendations will find it no surprise that therapeutic lifestyle changes are the foundation of naturopathic medicine:

In many cases, though, specific nutritional and herbal supplements can be critical for supporting a patient's vis medicatrix naturae:  the healing power of nature.  Particularly in the case of complex or chronic disease, such supplements are often necessary for a certain period of time.

One thing that often surprises patients is the dosages I recommend for many nutritional and herbal supplements.  I think that many of us have been conditioned by "One-A-Day" multivitamins to think that all supplements work that way.  In fact, this under-dosing is a key reason why many folks find that self-treatment with herbs and supplements is ineffective.

As an example, take one of my favorite supplements:  fish oil.  The beneficial components of fish oil are the long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, EPA and DHA (that's eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid for you nutritional biochem geeks out there).  Some folks take one softgel a day of fish oil -- 1000 milligrams!  Sounds like a lot, doesn't it?  Well, research shows that for general cardiovascular health, you should take around 1000 mg of omega-3 fatty acids per day.  "Well, great, then," you think, "I guess I'm covered."  Hold it right there:  fish oil supplements are not 100% omega-3 fats; each softgel might have only 300-400 mg of omega-3s.  So now you're faced with 3-4 softgels per day to get the recommended amount.  Do you see why I recommend liquid cod liver oil so often now?  Much easier to blend a teaspoon into a breakfast smoothie, yielding 1200 mg of omega-3s.

If you already have conditions such as high triglycerides that can benefit from omega-3 supplementation, now you need to up that dose to 2000-3000 mg per day:  7-10 softgels, or 2 - 2.5 teaspoons of liquid.  Omega-3 fats can benefit so many different conditions, such as autoimmune diseases, skin problems, menstrual cramps, depression, and anxiety -- as long as you're taking the proper dose.

Feel a cold coming on?  Yes, zinc lozenges can help -- as long you get a total dose of at least 75 mg of zinc per day (be sure to take with food, to avoid stomach upset).  Herbs such as echinacea, and my favorite combo of lomatium (Lomtium dissectum) and osha (Ligusticum porteri), are wonderful immune boosters -- just be sure take a dose every 2 hours during those first couple of days of a cold.  Less than that, you might as well skip it.

Nutritional and herbal supplements require these larger doses since they work synergistically to support the body's natural functions, rather than to suppress symptoms like pharmaceuticals.  So shift your mindset, and reap the benefits that nature has to offer.

Thursday, August 30, 2012

Great Science on What We Should Eat

In recent years, medical researchers have recognized some common denominators in chronic degenerative diseases:  insulin resistance, long-term inflammation, high blood pressure, and cholesterol imbalance (to name a few).  In fact, several of these factors have been grouped together to form metabolic syndrome, a constellation of symptoms including at least 3 of the following 5 conditions:

  • Fasting blood sugar (glucose) ≥100 mg/dL
  • Blood pressure ≥130/85 mm Hg
  • Triglycerides ≥150 mg/dL
  • HDL-C ("good cholesterol") < 40 mg/dL in men or < 50 mg/dL in women
  • Waist circumference ≥40 inches in men or ≥35 inches in women

I often talk to patients about dietary factors to reduce these risk factors, mainly focused on low glycemic index foods -- healthy foods that stabilize blood sugar and insulin levels throughout the day.  In a recent study (1), researchers used a dietary intervention for overweight middle-aged adults that significantly improved many of these markers for cardiometabolic risk.  Key components of the diet included the following:
  • Antioxidant-rich fruits and veggies
  • Omega-3 fatty acids (from fish oil)
  • A focus on low glycemic index meals
  • Viscous dietary fiber and plant sterols/stanols
  • Whole grains, soybeans, and almonds
  • Probiotic bacteria supplement
Sound familiar?  If you've been through FirstLine Therapy with me, this sounds an awful lot like that diet plan.  Most of these factors are available through sensible consumption of whole foods.  Some are more easily obtained through supplements (probiotic bacteria) or medical food meal replacements (viscous fiber, plant sterols/stanols).  And the results for good adherence to this diet?
  • Total cholesterol decreased by 26%
  • LDL ("bad cholesterol") decreased by 34%
  • hs-CRP (a marker of systemic inflammation) decreased by 29%
  • Systolic blood pressure dropped by 8%
Once again, science is showing that a common-sense, supplemented Mediterranean diet is as good as pharmaceuticals for improving cardiometabolic health -- without the side effects.

1.  Juscelino Tovar; Anne Nilsson; Maria Johansson; Rickard Ekesbo; Ann-Margreth Åberg; Ulla Johansson; Inger Björck.  A Diet Based on Multiple Functional Concepts Improves Cardiometabolic Risk Parameters in Healthy Subjects.  Nutr Metab. 2012;9(29).  Accessed August 29, 2012 at http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/766177