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Maggie Francis
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Omega-6 fatty acids – found in vegetable oils, nuts and seeds – are
a beneficial part of a heart-healthy eating plan, according to a
science advisory published in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.
The association recommends that people aim for at least 5
percent to 10 percent of calories from omega-6 fatty acids. Most
Americans actually get enough of these oils in the foods they are
currently eating, such as nuts, cooking oils and salad dressings, the
advisory reports. Recommended daily servings of omega-6 depend on
physical activity level, age and gender, but range from 12 to 22 grams
per day.
Omega-6, and the similarly-named omega-3 fatty acids (found in
fattier fish such as tuna, mackerel and salmon), are called
polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA), and can have health benefits when
consumed in the recommended amounts, especially when used to replace
saturated fats or trans fats in the diet. Omega-6 and omega-3 PUFA play
a crucial role in heart and brain function and in normal growth and
development. PUFA are "essential" fats that your body needs but can't
produce, so you must get them from food.
"Of course, as with any news about a single nutrient, it's
important to remember to focus on an overall healthy dietary pattern –
one nutrient or one type of food isn't a cure-all," said William
Harris, Ph.D., lead author of the advisory. "Our goal was simply to let
Americans know that foods containing omega-6 fatty acids can be part of
a healthy diet, and can even help improve your cardiovascular risk
profile."
The American Heart Association's dietary recommendations
suggest a broadly defined healthy eating pattern over time – with an
emphasis on fruits, vegetables, high-fiber whole grains, lean meat,
poultry, and fish twice a week. Diets rich in fruits, vegetables and
whole grains have been associated in a large number of studies with
reduced cardiovascular risk.
Linoleic acid (LA) is the main omega-6 fatty acid in foods,
accounting for 85 percent to 90 percent of the dietary omega-6 PUFA.
There has been some debate within the nutrition community
regarding the benefits of omega-6 based on the belief that they may
promote inflammation, thus increasing cardiovascular risk. "That idea
is based more on assumptions and extrapolations than on hard data,"
said Harris, a research professor for the Sanford School of Medicine at
the University of South Dakota and director of the Metabolism and
Nutrition Research Center at Sanford Research/USD
The linking of omega-6 intake to inflammation stems from the
fact that arachidonic acid (AA), which can be formed from LA, is
involved in the early stages of inflammation. However, the advisory
explains that AA and LA also give rise to anti-inflammatory molecules.
For example, in the cells that form the lining of blood
vessels, omega-6 PUFA have anti-inflammatory properties, suppressing
the production of adhesion molecules, chemokines and interleukins — all
of which are key mediators of the atherosclerotic process. "Thus, it is
incorrect to view the omega-6 fatty acids as 'pro-inflammatory,'"
Harris explained. "Eating less LA will not lower tissue levels of AA
(the usual rationale for reducing LA intakes) because the body tightly
regulates the synthesis of AA from LA."
The advisory reviewed a meta-analysis of randomized, controlled
trials, and more than two dozen observational, cohort, case/control and
ecological reports.
Observational studies showed that people who ate the most
omega-6 fatty acids usually had the least heart disease. Other studies
examined blood levels of omega-6 in heart patients compared with
healthy people and found that patients with heart disease had lower
levels of omega-6 in their blood.
In controlled trials in which researchers randomly assigned
people to consume diets containing high versus low levels of omega-6
and then recorded the number of heart attacks over several years, those
assigned to the higher omega-6 diets had less heart disease.
A meta-analysis of several trials indicated that replacing
saturated fats with PUFA lowered risk for heart disease events by 24
percent. "When saturated fat in the diet is replaced by omega-6 PUFA,
the blood cholesterol levels go down," Harris said. "This may be part
of the reason why higher omega-6 diets are heart-healthy."
Source: American Heart Association
Original article: William S. Harris, Dariush Mozaffarian, Eric Rimm, Penny Kris-Etherton, Lawrence L. Rudel, Lawrence J. Appel, Arguerite M. Engler, Mary B. Engler, and Frank Sacks. FAHA Omega-6 Fatty Acids and Risk for Cardiovascular Disease. A Science Advisory From the American Heart Association Nutrition Subcommittee of the Council on Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Metabolism; Council on Cardiovascular Nursing; and Council on Epidemiology and Prevention. Circulation January 26, 2009.
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