Omega-3s and Heart Disease
In addition to the research papers on omega-3s I talked about last week, another paper was presented at the American College of Cardiology in May that suggests EPA seems to reduce cardiovascular disease (CVD), while DHA seems to neutralize the benefits. Let’s take a look at this recent study to see what they found.
I haven’t seen the data, just press releases of varying lengths; I’ve written the authors but haven’t heard back yet. The problem with this recent study is that it’s a retrospective examination of a large group of people. The data are part of an ongoing study (much like the All Of Us study in which I’m a volunteer) that secured blood and tissue samples of volunteers; the researchers use that data as well as access to the volunteers’ medical records. In this case, they assessed the EPA and DHA levels of the blood samples and the CVD events that occurred in a random sample of the volunteers over the years. That’s how they determined that the EPA was beneficial in reducing CVD and as DHA levels rose, the benefits were negated.
The primary problem is that the blood samples are a snapshot of one day in the life of the volunteers. We have no idea if they took dietary supplements or if they happened to eat a lot of fish or a lot of nuts and other foods with omega-3s. No other dietary data, no supplement data, no exercise data—all things that we know are related to the development of cardiovascular disease. I think there’s a significant factor at play in this data analysis, and I’ll give you that observation in Saturday’s memo.
What are you prepared to do today?
Dr. Chet
Reference: Press Release: Warning: Combination of Omega-3s in Popular Supplements May Blunt Heart Benefits. Intermountain Medical Center May 17, 2021