Omega 1-2-3


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Aug 12 2019 47 mins   2.7k
Based on all the hype, you’d be forgiven for believing that the fish oils known as omega-3s are solution to every problem. Heart disease, dementia, depression, even obesity—the list of ailments that experts claim a daily dose of omega-3 can help prevent seems endless. And with more than ten percent of Americans taking a capsule of fish oil daily, omega-3s are one of the most profitable supplements in the world, too. Listen in this episode, as author Paul Greenberg and scientist JoAnn Manson help us figure out what these supposedly miracle molecules are, and what consuming them is doing to our bodies—and to our oceans. Paul Greenberg had already authored a couple of successful and award-winning books about fish by the time he hit his mid-40s—an age when he, like many people, started to feel the first, faint signs that he was no longer young. “When you Google all the things that are going wrong with you in middle age—your joints hurt, your high blood pressure, losing your memory—what comes up again and again are omega-3 supplements,” he told Gastropod. Greenberg knew those supplements are made from fish—millions of tiny fish that no one eats, like the menhaden and the Peruvian anchoveta. And so he set out to write his most recent book, The Omega Principle, which follows fish oils from their evolutionary origins at the dawn of photosynthesis, to their discovery by a Spam scientist, to the enormous extraction industry that feeds our hunger for them today. The secret to omega-3’s success lies in their chemical structure, which makes them more flexible and dynamic than other fatty acids. That means they show up anywhere that needs to move or transmit signals rapidly—hummingbird wings, sperm, and, especially, the human brain. Experiments in the 1930s proved that fatty acids including omega-3s were essential for life, but, until relatively recently, they were mostly studied by scientists looking to extend the shelf-life of processed foods, as the dynamism of omega-3’s chemical structure also gives them a tendency to go rancid quickly. Then, in the 1970s, two Norwegian researchers published a paper linking low rates of cardiovascular disease among the Inuit to their elevated consumption of omega-3s. Since then, more than 20,000 papers have been published examining their health benefits—but, according to Harvard epidemiologist JoAnn Manson, many of those studies were flawed. She’s the lead researcher on the first large-scale, randomized clinical trial of the efficacy of omega-3s in preventing cancer, heart disease, and stroke in the general public. Her VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL (VITAL) study launched in 2010, and recently published its first results—which Manson shared with us this episode. So, are omega-3s really the key to a healthy old age? And, if we should be consuming more omega-3s, then how much, and in what form? From cod liver oil to cardiovascular risk, listen in this episode for the history and science of America’s favorite fatty acid. Episode Notes Join Our Fifth Birthday Celebrations! We’re turning five in September (we know, we don’t look it! or even act it sometimes…) and we need your help to put together a special birthday episode. Nominate your favorite Gastropod stories and moments from our first five years here, so we can revisit them in the show. Paul Greenberg and The Omega Principle Paul Greenberg is an award-winning journalist who writes mostly about the ocean and environmental issues. He’s the author of Four Fish, American Catch, and, most recently, The Omega Principle. JoAnn Manson and the VITAL study JoAnn Manson is chief of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and director and principal investigator of the VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL (VITAL). The post Omega 1-2-3 appeared first on Gastropod.