Seguici su acebook facebook Cerca nel sito:

Le ricerche di Gerona 2005

(02-05-09) Fish Oil and Fatty Fish Protect Men from Heart Failure



by Sherry Baker




A new study just published in the European Heart Journal
concludes that eating fatty fish and the marine omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil appears to protect men from heart failure. This is important news because heart failure (also known as congestive heart failure, or CHF) is an enormous health problem in the U.S. According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, approximately five million Americans have the condition and about 300,000 die from heart failure each year.

Heart failure is a condition in which the heart is unable to pump blood efficiently. In fact, the heart is be unable to send blood throughout the body with adequate force and circulation can suffer. The result can be fatigue and other symptoms, including swollen legs. Medication is usually the first line of treatment for the condition and,
when therapies fail, the last hope for people with heart failure is a heart
transplant.

How could eating fatty fish and omega-3s have any impact on this
cardiac problem? The answer probably is found in earlier studies which have shown fish oils help combat a host of heart-related problems such as high triglycerides, high blood pressure and fast heart rate that are associated with the development of heart failure.

For the recent study, a team of US and Swedish researchers followed 39,367 Swedish men between the ages of 45 and 79,
from 1998 to 2004. They kept a record of what the men ate and tracked their health during this period through the Swedish inpatient records and cause-of-death registers. Over the six year period, 597 men without a history of heart disease or diabetes developed heart failure and 34 died.

The scientists documented that the men who consumed fatty fish (such as herring, mackerel, salmon, whitefish and char) once a week were 12% less likely to develop heart failure compared to the men who never ate fatty fish. In addition, the researchers found another, more statistically significant association between the intake of marine omega-3 fatty acids (found in cod livers and other fish oils) and heart failure. The men who consumed approximately 0.36 grams a day
were 33% less likely to develop heart failure than their counterparts who ate little or no marine omega-3 fatty acids (0.15-0.22 grams a day).

Curiously, it was the eating of only one serving of fatty fish a week and a moderate intake of omega-3 fatty acids that was linked with the heart protective benefits.
Eating more fish throughout the week not only didn't produce a larger benefit, it returned the chance of heart failure to the same levels seen in men who didn't consume fish or fish oils. However, the researcher who headed the study, Emily Levitan, MD, a cardiology research fellow at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, suggested several explanations for this finding.

"The higher rate of heart failure in men who consumed the most
fatty fish or marine omega-3 fatty acids compared with moderate consumption may be due to chance," Dr. Levitan explained in a statement to the media.
"Alternatively, these may be men in poor health who ate more fish to try to improve their ill-health, and therefore the fatty fish and fatty acids appear to be risk factors for heart failure. I suspect this is the most likely explanation, but we cannot be certain from our data."

Dr. Levitan added that the new study supports the idea that a healthy diet, including moderate consumption of fatty fish, can reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases including heart failure. "It will be important to replicate these findings in other populations, particularly those including women, as our study was conducted in men only," she noted.

Reference: "Fish consumption, marine omega-3 fatty acids, and incidence of heart failure: a population-based prospective
study of middle-aged and elderly men". European Heart Journal. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehp111.

For more information:
http://www.americanheart.org/presen... http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci...

Source: NaturalNews

News

  • (30-08-2018) The electronics in fluorescent bulbs and light emitting diodes (LED), rather than ultraviolet radiation, cause increased malignant melanoma incidence in indoor office workers and tanning bed users

    Leggi tutto

  • (30-08-2018) Mitocondri e peso forma

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Stroke now impacting younger patients as a result of the obesity epidemic; 4 in 10 are now aged 40-69

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Perdere peso non vuol dire perdere osso!

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Brain cholesterol: long secret life behind a barrier.

    Leggi tutto

  • (29-08-2018) Stile di vita sano? Si può, basta usare la fantasia

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Top 10 medical treatments that can make you SICKER than before you took them

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Meno ansia - C’è una associazione tra dieta e disturbi mentali?

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Dietary curcumin supplementation attenuates inflammation, hepatic injury and oxidative damage in a rat model of intra-uterine growth retardation.

    Leggi tutto

  • (22-08-2018) Dopo la gravidanza - Una dieta a basso indice glicemico se serve perdere peso

    Leggi tutto

  • (21-08-2018) Sleep Disturbances Can Be Prospectively Observed in Patients with an Inactive Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

    Leggi tutto

  • (21-08-2018) Anche i neo-papà soffrono della depressione post partum

    Leggi tutto


In evidenza

"L'informazione presente nel sito serve a migliorare, e non a sostituire, il rapporto medico-paziente."

Per coloro che hanno problemi di salute si consiglia di consultare sempre il proprio medico curante.

Informazioni utili