Fish Oil May Protect Against Alzheimer's
Omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish and
other oils and known to provide a range of health benefits, may
help protect against Alzheimer's disease, U.S. researchers reported.
Tests on mice showed that a diet
high in one particular omega-3 fatty acid called DHA helped protect
the brain against the memory loss and cell damage caused by Alzheimer's
disease.
"We saw that a diet rich in DHA,
or docosahexaenoic acid, dramatically reduces the impact of an
Alzheimer's gene, said Greg Cole, a professor of neurology at
University of California Los Angeles school of medicine.
Writing in the journal Neuron,
Cole and colleagues said they studied mice bred to have genetic
mutations that cause brain lesions associated with Alzheimer's
disease.
They were looking for something
else but noticed the mice did not have the expected memory loss
or brain damage. Notably, the synapses, the connections between
brain cells, were not as damaged as would be expected.
"We discovered that the mice lived
on a nutritious diet of soy and fish -- two ingredients chock-full
of omega-3 fatty acids," said Sally Frautschy, who worked on the
study.
"Because earlier studies suggest
that omega-3 fatty acids may prevent Alzheimer's disease, we realized
that the mice's diet could be countering the very thing we were
trying to accomplish -- showing the progression of the Alzheimer's-related
brain damage," she added in a statement.
The researchers took the fish and
soy out of the mouse diet and substituted safflower oil instead,
which is low in omega-3 and rich in another fatty acid called
omega-6, which does not include DHA. Some mice got the original
diet and others got the new, less-healthy diet.
"We found high amounts of synaptic
damage in the brains of the Alzheimer's-diseased mice that ate
the DHA-depleted diet," Frautschy said. "These changes closely
resembled those we see in the brains of people with Alzheimer's
disease."
Mutant mice on the DHA-rich diet
did better on memory tests than the mice fed safflower oil, the
researchers said.
"After adjusting for all possible
variables, DHA was the only factor remaining that protected the
mice against the synaptic damage and memory loss that should have
resulted from their Alzheimer's genes," said Cole. "We concluded
that the DHA-enriched diet was holding their genetic disease at
bay."
People are already advised to eat
omega-3 fatty acids to protect the heart.
DHA and a related fatty acid called
AHA are also added to some infant formulas and milks to promote
brain development. They are found naturally in human breast milk.
Reference
Source 89
September 2, 2004
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