Omega 3 Fish Oil And Its Effect On Mood And
Mental Function
If you have lost your joie de vivre, then there is every chance that
you are deficient in the essential fatty acids required for regulating
mood and for efficient functioning of the brain. It is now well
documented that insufficient Omega 3 fatty acids in the diet not only
leads to an increased risk of developing physical health problems like
heart disease and atherosclerosis, but also to mood and learning
related disorders.
Studies show that people who are suffering from
depression, bipolar
disorder, ADHD, ADD, postnatal
depression,
PMS, dyslexia and many other
mood and learning related disorders have low levels of the essential
Omega 3 fatty acids in their blood. High levels of the equally
essential but over abundant Omega 6 fatty acids have also been found.
This imbalance can turn out to be extremely debilitating for some, or
it could simply mean low moods, an inability to concentrate and focus,
irritability and a general feeling of malaise for others.
Over the past 70 years or so, we have dramatically increased our
consumption of Omega 6 and all but annihilated our intake of Omega 3
and the staggering reality is that very few of us are actually getting
the amount of Omega 3 we need. Fish oil contains the Omega 3 fatty
acids Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), both
of which are vital for healthy brain development and function. Putting
physical health problems aside, those of us who have low blood levels
of Omega 3 are more likely to adopt a negative outlook on life, to
behave impulsively and to feel depressed according to researchers at
the University of Pittsburgh.
It stands to reason that if we increase our intake of Omega 3 fatty
acids in the form of fish oil, then we might be able to improve mood
and reduce, eliminate or even prevent many of the symptoms associated
with a lack of these fatty acids. And this is exactly what researchers
have found.
What the research
says…
• According to a study led by Lawrence Whalley, a mental health
professor at Aberdeen University, fish oil appears to help the brain to
work faster, it increases IQ scores and slows down the ageing process
by reducing inflammation.
• The Durham trials led by Dr Madeleine Portwood have consistently
shown that fish oil with a high EPA content improves behaviour,
concentration and learning resulting in better grades at school. •
Adelaide University, who also used high EPA fish oil, claimed it to be
an effective treatment for ADHD.
• Research led by Dr Andrew Stoll looked at the effect of Omega 3 fatty
acids on Bipolar disorder and found that fish oil reduced the severity
of the symptoms.
• Hibbeln et al found a direct link between lower fish consumption and
the risk of developing postnatal
depression
and that research spanned
22 countries.
• An Italian study by Fontani et al concluded that Omega 3
supplementation improves complex cortical processing with improvements
in mood and a reduction in anger, anxiety and
depression
These examples represent only a fraction of the studies conducted but
they demonstrate just how effective fish oil can be in positively
influencing mood and mental functioning.
But one of the biggest studies to date on the effect of Omega 3 fatty
acids on
depression was conducted by
Malcolm Peet at Sheffield
University who found that ethyl-EPA, a highly concentrated and purified
form of the Omega 3 fatty acid EPA, dramatically reduced
depression.
He, along with a growing number of others, now believe that EPA is the
fatty acid primarily responsible for the profound effect on mood and
brain functioning and not DHA as once was thought.
EPA versus DHA
Although we need both EPA and DHA equally, as Ralph Holman, an expert
on fatty acids once said "DHA is structure and EPA is function". We
need DHA for the proper development of the brain during pregnancy and
through the first few years of life, but the rest of the time we need
EPA for the brain to function efficiently. Some research has also
indicated that the presence of DHA might actually interfere with the
beneficial properties of EPA making it somewhat less effective than
fish oil with a very high EPA content.
How EPA works
No one yet knows exactly how EPA works, but it is believed to reduce
inflammation, thin the blood, increase serotonin levels, and improve
blood flow to the brain leading to greater inter-connectivity in the
neural networks. EPA and other fatty acids we consume compete with each
other to be converted into eicosanoids. These hormone-like compounds
will either be pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory depending on the
type of fatty acid that dominated at the time, for example, Omega 3 or
Omega 6.
As EPA is constantly being used up as it were, we need to replenish our
supplies in order to inhibit overproduction of pro-inflammatory
eicosanoids, which is known to put us at greater risk of
depression and
other health problems. Conclusion
Fish oil may not be a panacea for mental health problems, but there is
little doubt that supplementing with fish oil high in EPA has the
ability to improve mental functioning and to make a profound difference
to the symptoms associated with mood related conditions like
depression.
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