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Omega
3 and Reduced Risk of Myocardial Infarction |
by:
Greg
Post |
Myocardial
infarction is a technical term used to describe
an irreversible injury to heart muscle.
It is normally used as a synonym for a heart
attack and will be so used in this essay.
Myocardial infarction is normally related
to progressive atherosclerosis (blockage
of the arteries.) Essentially the heart
is slowly starved of oxygen and stops functioning
properly causing irreparable damage and
even death.
It is no surprise that much of the developed
world suffers from heart disease because
of diet and other lifestyle habits. In the
United States heart disease remains the
number one killer among adults and demonstrates
similar statistics in many other modern
countries. The surprise comes in knowing
that the majority of heart disease is avoidable
yet educated people continue to ignore the
dangers and promote lifestyles conducive
to cardiac damage. Though many factors contribute
to heart disease the current essay will
focus on one, in two parts. First we will
consider the relation of fish consumption
and myocardial infarction. Secondly we will
consider the effects of dietary supplementation
with omega-3 and vitamin E for those who
had previously survived a heart attack.
Fish consumption and heart disease has been
a topic of innumerable studies. One research
project combined data taken from several
such studies including the Chicago Western
Electric Study, the Zutphen, Rotterdam and
Swedish studies and the Study of U.S. Physicians
among others. The goal of this research
was to examine the relationship between
fish consumption and the 30-year risk of
death from coronary disease.
The participants of the study included 1,822
men between the ages of forty and fifty-five
who were free of cardiovascular disease.
For the first ten years annual examinations
were given and mailed questionnaires and/or
telephone interviews were used for the next
fifteen years. Death certificates were used
to classify cause of death for each patient.
During the 30-years follow up there were
a total of 430 deaths from cardiovascular
disease with 293 due to myocardial infarctions.
Of the latter 196 were sudden, 94 were non-sudden
and the remaining three could not be classified
as either. Almost all of the sudden deaths
were caused by myocardial infarction.
Detailed dietary history was kept on each
participant with daily fish consumption
as the primary focus. Each participant was
categorized into one of four groups. The
first group reportedly consumed no fish.
The second group consumed between one and
seventeen grams of fish per day. The third
and fourth groups measured consumption as
eighteen to thirty-four grams per day and
greater than thirty-four grams per day respectively.
Predictably the results demonstrated an
inverse relationship between fish consumption
and the occurrence of myocardial infarction.
In particular the participants who ate at
least 35 grams of fish per day had a 42%
lower death rate from heart attack compared
to those who ate no fish at all.
The findings of these combined studies were
consistent with other data concluding that
diets high in fish demonstrate a reduced
occurrence of death from coronary heart
disease. This is especially true in relation
to deaths that are of a non-sudden nature.
That is not to conclude, however, that fish
consumption does not inversely affect the
risk of sudden cardiac death. Other studies
have verified that such a relationship exists.
Those studies are, however, beyond the scope
of this essay.
But why does fish consumption improve heart
health? It could just be the fact that people
who eat fish eat less of other harmful foods.
To focus a little more closely on the beneficial
causes of fish consumption it is important
to consider at least one study that isolated
omega-3 intake via dietary supplements regardless
of diet. The interesting thing about this
study is that it was concerned with the
effects of omega-3 and vitamin E supplementation
on patients who had already experienced
a heart attack.
The GISSI-Prevenzione trial, as it is known,
hoped to establish any relationship that
might exist between omega-3 and vitamin
E as combined agents in the fight against
heart disease. It was a randomized trial
involving 11,234 patients who had survived
a heart attack within the previous three
months at the time the study began. The
participants were divided into four groups.
Group one received one gram of omega-3 supplements
daily. Group two received 300mg of vitamin
E every day. Group three received both while
the control group received neither. Each
participant received clinical examinations
with blood samples taken and were asked
to fill out diet questionnaires at the outset
of the experiment and at six, twelve, eighteen,
thirty and forty-two months.
The data were analyzed using two methods.
A two-way analysis was made comparing omega-3
supplementing and no omega-3, as well as
vitamin E intake compared to no vitamin
E. A four-way analysis was also conducted
comparing the combination of omega-3 and
vitamin E with omega-3 alone and vitamin
E alone. The effects of the combined supplements
were also compared with the group that took
no supplements.
The results of the test demonstrated a 14%
decrease in death from any cause for the
two-way analysis and a 20% drop in death
rate for the four-way analysis. Concerning
only death due to cardiovascular disease,
the two-way analysis showed a 17% reduction
of risk while the four-way analysis revealed
a 30% decrease. Though vitamin E is known
to be a powerful antioxidant, the group
that supplemented with the combination of
omega-3 and vitamin E showed no life-expectancy
advantage over the group that supplemented
with only the omega-3.
The overall conclusion of the GISSI-Prevenzione
trial was that supplementing with omega-3
provided long term benefits in lowering
risk of death for patients who had experienced
a myocardial infarction.
About the author:
Greg holds degrees in science, divinity
and philosophy and is currently an I.T.
developer.
http://www.optimal-heart-health.com/fishoils.html
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