We have brought to you several articles showing the advantages of adding Omega-3 into your diet. A new study has shown that these fatt...
We have brought to you several articles showing the advantages of adding
Omega-3 into your diet.
A new study has shown that these fatty acids can cross the blood brain
barrier in people with Alzheimer’s disease, and doing so they can affect the
inflammatory process that occurs within the disease.
Interesting enough this article has not made to the press. There are
many studies showing how Omega-3 dietary supplements may protect against
Alzheimer’s. However, at this time, researchers were interested in verifying whether
omega-3 supplementation could help patients who have already developed the
disease.
Omega-3 dietary supplements pass the blood-brain barrier
New research from Karolinska
Institutet shows that omega-3 fatty acids in dietary supplements can cross the
blood brain barrier in people with Alzheimer's disease, affecting known markers
for both the disease itself and inflammation. The findings are presented in the
Journal of Internal Medicine, and strengthen the evidence that omega-3 may
benefit certain forms of this seriously debilitating disease.
"Earlier population studies
indicate that omega-3 can protect against Alzheimer's disease, which makes it
interesting to study the effects of dietary supplements containing this group
of fatty acids in patients who have already developed the disease," says
the study's lead author Dr Yvonne Freund-Levi.
Omega-3 and other essential
polyunsaturated fatty acids accumulate in the central nervous system (CNS)
during gestation. It has been assumed that these acids are continually replaced
throughout life, but little is known about how this occurs and whether changes
in diet can affect the transport of important fatty acids across the
blood-brain barrier. The blood-brain barrier serves to protect the brain from
harmful chemicals existing naturally in the blood, but also blocks the delivery
of drug substances to the brain.
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Several diseases can affect the fatty
acid profile of the CNS; in patients with Alzheimer's disease, for example,
previous research has observed lower than normal brain concentrations of
docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), an omega-3 fatty acid.
In the present study, part of the
larger OmegAD project, scientists examined whether omega-3 dietary supplements
change the fatty acid profile of the CNS in patients with mild Alzheimer's
disease. Thirty-three patients participated in the study, 18 of whom received a
daily omega-3 supplement and 15 a placebo for six months. The results show that
the first group had higher levels of both DHA and eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA,
another omega-3 fatty acid) in their cerebrospinal fluid (which surrounds the
CNS) and blood. No such change was seen in the placebo group.
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Moreover, they also found that levels
of DHA correlated directly with the degree of change in Alzheimer's disease and
inflammatory markers in the cerebrospinal fluid. Researchers in the field have
long been interested in this link between Alzheimer's disease and inflammation,
but attempts to treat the disease using traditional anti-inflammatory drugs
have failed to produce any improvements in memory function.
"In animals, DHA dietary supplements
can lead to an increase in DHA concentrations in the CNS," says Professor
Jan Palmblad, who initiated the study. "Here we show that the same applies
to humans, which suggests that omega-3 fatty acids in dietary supplements cross
the blood-brain barrier. However, much work remains to be done before we know
how these fatty acids can be used in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease to
halt memory loss."
The study was financed with grants
from the Capio Research Foundation, the Dementia Association, the Gamla
Tjänarinnor Foundation, the Swedish Alzheimer's Society, Oddfellows Sweden, the
Swedish Nutrition Foundation, the Gun and Bertil Stohne Foundation, the Swedish
Society of Medicine, Lions Sweden, the Norwegian Omega-3 producer Pronova
Biocare A/S, and Stockholm County Council through its ALF funding agreement
with Karolinska Institutet.
This material was provided by Karolinska Institutet.