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Omega-3 Status in U.S. Adults below Recommended Level for Cardiovascular Health

Article-Omega-3 Status in U.S. Adults below Recommended Level for Cardiovascular Health

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<p>A new paper compared plasma long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid biomarkers in U.S. adults with recommended concentration levels for cardiovascular health.</p>

DSM Nutritional Products co-authored a new paper comparing plasma long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (LCn-3 PUFA) biomarkers in U.S. adults, with recommended concentration levels for cardiovascular health. It revealed overwhelming evidence of suboptimal LCn-3 concentrations across all age groups and highlighted the need to increase dietary intake (Nutrients. 2015;7:10282-10289).

Using data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2003-2004, the cross-sectional study is one of the first to analyze plasma LCn-3 PUFA status from dietary biomarkers in a nationally representative population of American adults. Of the 1,386 subjects, 80.6 percent had LCn-3 concentrations below dietary guidelines for heart health and nearly all (95.7 percent) did not achieve levels associated with cardio-protection; this was particularly evident among Hispanic participants of all ages.

The Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee and the American Heart Association recommend two servings of seafood per week. “Large population studies designed to evaluate consumption against these guidelines have traditionally relied on self-completed diaries, recall or questionnaires—all of which are open to error," said Michael McBurney, vice president, science, communications and advocacy at DSM. “By analyzing circulation concentrations recorded as part of NHANES, our research provides a much more accurate characterization of LCn-3 PUFA status among American men and women."

Blood was drawn from adults aged 20 and above after a fast of eight hours or more. Plasma samples were stored at -70&#730;C and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry used to measure 24 plasma fatty acids. The concentration of LCn-3 PUFAs was determined by the standardized methodology outlined in previously published papers for consistency and comparison. Results were reported for the total sample population and stratified by three age groups corresponding to approximate life stages (young adult, middle age and older age) as well as ethnicity (self-identified).

“The results of this study offer a valuable point of reference for previous and future studies investigating the benefits of dietary omega-3 fatty acids on cardiovascular health," stated Manfred Eggersdorfer, Ph.D., senior vice president nutrition science & advocacy at DSM and professor for healthy ageing at University Medical Center Groningen. Little has changed since this round of NHANES was carried out; dietary intake of fish has remained consistently low in the United States the last two decades. Only 7.8 percent of adults reported taking fish oil supplements in 2012 (Natl Health Stat Rep. 2015;79:1-16), which is likely too low to have a population impact on LCn-3 PUFA status.

“The overall finding that suboptimal LCn-3 concentrations are prevalent across all demographic groups in the sample population suggests the need to elucidate clinical implications, including for cardiovascular disease," added Saurabh Mehta, Sc.D., assistant professor, division of nutritional sciences, Cornell University, New York and contributing author.

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