GoodHealthMD.com
Fish Oil For the Brain
We know that what you eat, and don't eat, can affect your health. But is it
possible, as the White Rabbit advised Alice, to "feed your head"? Is there
such a thing as brain food? I'm convinced there is. The evidence for some
foods, such as fish, is stronger than for others, like turmeric and brightly
colored vegetables. But none of those foods is bad for you, and they
certainly won't make you any less smart.
The reason fish is so good for the brain is the so-called omega-3 fatty
acids it contains. Oily fish, like salmon, sardines, mackerel, herring,
bluefish and black cod, are the best sources of those special fats. One of
the omega-3s.DHA.is the main constituent of cell membranes in the brain, and
a deficiency of it can weaken the brain's architecture and leave it
vulnerable to disease.
Diets associated with longevity and good health, like the Mediterranean and
traditional Japanese diets, are high in omega-3 fatty acids from fish. The
North American diet is not. I have long recommended that people in the U.S.
eat more fish.at least two servings a week.but I have been concerned lately
about reports of increasing levels of mercury, PCBS and other contaminants
in certain fish species. In my diet I stick to sardines, herring, Alaskan
black cod and Alaskan sockeye salmon. All sockeye (red) salmon are wild.fish
farmers haven't yet been able to domesticate them.and since those fish are
less carnivorous than other types of salmon, they have lower levels of the
environmental contaminants that accumulate as you work your way up the food
chain. Canned sockeye, available in most supermarkets, is a perfectly good
source of omega-3s.
But for some people it may be easier and safer to rely on fish-oil
supplements. The best are distilled and certified to be free of mercury and
other toxins. Some are flavored, and some even taste good.or at least a lot
better than the cod-liver oil I was forced to take as a kid. One product I
recommend is Antarctic krill oil, made from the tiny crustaceans that abound
in southern seas and are consumed in great quantities by whales and other
marine mammals. Krill oil is red from carotenoid pigments, which have high
antioxidant activity, and it doesn't cause those fishy burps. A good
starting dose of fish oil of any kind is 1g a day. Higher doses, up to 10g a
day, have been used, with varying results, to treat such diverse conditions
as depression, attention deficit disorder, bipolar disorder and even autism.
Vegetarian sources of omega-3 fatty acids, such as walnuts, flax and hemp,
are good additions to the diet but not so reliable as fish. They supply a
short-chain compound (ALA) that the body must convert to long-chain DHA, and
the efficiency of that conversion can vary. Some people don't do it well,
and those eating mainstream diets top-heavy in the omega-6 fatty acids found
in processed food and prepared meals are at a disadvantage because omega-6s
interfere with the conversion of ALA to DHA. For vegetarians and vegans,
there is one nonfish source of long-chain omega-3s: supplements made from
algae. (Algae is the source of the omega-3s that fish store in their fat)
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