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Research
shows novel benefits of Fatty Acids in
Arteries
Newswise
— New research from Columbia University
Medical Center continues to shed light on
the benefits of making fish a staple of any
diet.
Fish are generally rich in omega-3 fatty
acids, which have shown benefit in many
health areas such as helping to prevent
mental illness and delaying some of the
disabilities associated with aging.
Eating tuna, sardines, salmon and other
so-called cold water fish appears to protect
people against clogged arteries.
Omega-3 fatty acids can also lower
triglycerides, a type of fat often found in
the bloodstream.
Now, a CUMC research team led by Richard J.
Deckelbaum, M.D., Director of the Columbia
Institute of Human Nutrition, has found that
a diet rich in fish oils can prevent the
accumulation of fat in the aorta, the main
artery leaving the heart.
The beneficial actions of fish oil that
block cholesterol buildup in arteries are
even found at high fat intakes.
The study was conducted in three separate
populations of mice: one that was fed a
balanced diet, one that was fed a diet
resembling a “Western” diet high in
saturated fat, and a third that was fed a
high fish fat diet rich in omega-3 fatty
acids.
Researchers in Dr. Deckelbaum’s laboratory,
including Chuchun Liz Chang, a Ph.D. student
in nutritional and metabolic biology, found
that the fatty acids contained in fish oil
markedly inhibit the entry of “bad,” or LDL,
cholesterol into arteries and, as a result,
much less cholesterol collects in these
vessels.
They found that this is related to the
ability of those fatty acids to markedly
decrease lipoprotein lipase, a molecule that
traps LDL in the arterial wall.
This will likely prove to be important as a
new mechanism which helps explain benefits
of omega-3 fatty acids on heart health.
Dr. Deckelbaum advises those interested in
increasing omega-3 intakes do so by either
increasing fish intake or by using
supplements that contain the “long-chain”
fatty acids, EPA and DHA, which are found in
cold water fish.
The research was published February 5, 2009
by the American Heart Association’s
Arteriolosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular
Biology, and is supported in part by grants
from the National Institutes of Health.
The mission of the Institute of Human
Nutrition (IHN) is to provide outstanding
academic, professional education, and
training programs in human nutrition and
conduct basic science and translational
research on the role of nutrition in human
health.
The Institute’s educational outreach
includes conferences, symposia, and other
initiatives for health practitioners,
educators, industry, and non-profit
organizations to advance knowledge on
nutrition’s role in health and disease for
individuals and populations worldwide.
Since its fiftieth anniversary in 2005, the
Institute has initiated strategic planning
to expand research and educational
initiatives, alumni programs, fund-raising,
and global dissemination of its nutrition
education and intervention programs.
Columbia University Medical Center provides
international leadership in basic,
pre-clinical and clinical research, in
medical and health sciences education, and
in patient care.
The medical center trains future leaders and
includes the dedicated work of many
physicians, scientists, public health
professionals, dentists, and nurses at the
College of Physicians & Surgeons, the
Mailman School of Public Health, the College
of Dental Medicine, the School of Nursing,
the biomedical departments of the Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences, and allied
research centers and institutions.
Established in 1767, Columbia's College of
Physicians & Surgeons was the first
institution in the country to grant the M.D.
degree and is among the most selective
medical schools in the country.
Columbia University Medical Center is home
to the largest medical research enterprise
in New York City and state and one of the
largest in the United States. For more
information, please visit
www.cumc.columbia.edu.
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