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Contents
DHA Lowers Blood Tryglycerides in Diet
Study
Chemists Darshan Kelley (left) and Gary Nelson analyze data from the
longest DHA study yet reported with in-residence volunteers.
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High blood levels of fats known as triglycerides may increase risk of heart
disease. So may an unhealthy ratio of the good HDL cholesterol to the bad LDL
cholesterol. Coronary heart disease that can result from these or other factors
kills more Americans than any other disease.
Scientists with the Agricultural Research
Service's Western Human Nutrition Research Center have seen triglyceride
levels go down in volunteers who ate meals supplemented with a moderately high
level of DHA, a polyunsaturated fatty acid. DHA is short for docosahexaenoic
(DOE-coe-suh-hex-uh-noy-ick) acid. The center, part of USDA's Agricultural
Research Service, is in San Francisco, California.
Volunteers on a DHA-enriched regimen also showed an increase in HDL
cholesterol, the kind known to protect against heart disease.
What's more, DHA may do this without unwanted side effects such as prolonged
bleeding time or slower-than-normal blood clotting. These negative effects have
been found in some studies of another polyunsaturated fat known as EPA, or
eicosapentaenoic (EE-coe-suh-pent-uh-noy-ick) acid. EPA and DHA belong to the
family of omega-3 fatty acids.
"From results with our small group of 10 volunteers," says ARS
research chemist Gary J. Nelson, "it appears dietary DHA may be beneficial
in altering an individual's risk of cardiovascular disease. But longer studies
are needed before we can be certain."

Chemist Perla Schmidt uses a rotary evaporator to remove solvent from lipids
extracted from volunteers' blood samples. She is putting dry ice in the top of
the evaporator to cool and condense the solvent for removal.
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The study was designed to help separate the effects of DHA and EPA.
"In fish oils, in particular," says Nelson, "these two
polyunsaturated fats have been of intense interest in nutrition research since
the 1970s. That's when studies suggested that the cardiovascular health of
Greenland Eskimos might result in part from the predominance of oil-rich fish
in their diets. Purported benefits include lowering the total amount of
triglycerides in the blood.
"Fish and fish oils contain both DHA and EPA," Nelson says.
"Of the two, EPA is predominant in fish that live in cold oceans. The
presence of both EPA and DHA makes it difficult to determine which of the two
is the major contributor to the health benefits claimed for fish or fish
oil."
To help differentiate the effects of DHA and EPA, Nelson and colleagues used
a natural oil extracted from golden algae that contains 40 percent DHA--but no
EPA. This substance, according to Nelson, "has only recently become
available as a source of purified DHA."
For the experiment, Nelson collaborated with chemists Darshan S. Kelley,
Perla C. Schmidt, and Giovanni L. Bartolini, of the nutrition center, and David
J. Kyle, vice president of Martek Corp. The Columbia, Maryland, company
manufactures the DHA-rich oil used in the study.
Ten volunteers--healthy, nonsmoking males aged 20 to 39--lived at the
research center for the 4-month-study--the longest DHA experiment reported with
in-residence volunteers. For the first 30 days, the volunteers ate a baseline
diet that provided less than 50 milligrams a day of DHA.
For the remaining 90 days, 6 grams--about a teaspoon--of the DHA-rich oil
was mixed with salad dressings or with bean, guacamole, or salsa dips served to
six of the volunteers. That's about 100 times more DHA per day than most
Americans consume. The other volunteers got safflower oil instead.
All meals for all volunteers were very low in EPA. To ensure that all the
men received enough antioxidants, they took a 100-milligram vitamin E capsule
every 5 days.

Gas chromotography enables chemist Giovanni Bartolini to evaluate DHA samples
obtained from participants in the San Fransico test.
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Meals featured familiar foods prepared with precision by the research
center's dietary staff. One day's menus included, for instance, buttermilk
pancakes, maple syrup, and sliced bananas for breakfast; canned peaches, sliced
ham with jack cheese, lettuce, and mayonnaise on whole-wheat bread for
lunch--with a salad of sliced cucumbers and french dressing on the side. A
dinner of canned pineapple, roast chicken with teriyaki sauce, brown rice, and
green beans was followed by chocolate cake as the evening snack.
Triglycerides in blood decreased by about 26 percent in volunteers on the
DHA regimen. Their HDL cholesterol--the good kind--rose an average of 9
percent.
The DHA-supplemented group also showed an increase of about 69 percent in
apoprotein-E. This compound carries cholesterol from peripheral tissues back to
the liver for breakdown and excretion. Increased apo-E, Nelson says, "has
not been reported in other DHA or EPA studies with humans."
Nelson and co-workers looked at several indicators of normal bleeding and
clotting. They found no significant differences in these measures before or
after the high-DHA diet. "That's unlike fish oils," says Nelson.
"They have been shown to increase bleeding times. Fish oils have also been
shown to inhibit aggregation of blood platelets needed to form clots."
DHA and EPA are essential to good health. Our bodies need fats to carry
fat-soluble vitamins like A, D, and K; to make steroid hormones; to keep skin
healthy; and to perform other biochemical chores.
But health officials today generally recommend that fats take up no more
than 30 percent of each day's total calories. Saturated fats--ones like butter
and lard that stay solid at room temperature--should make up no more than 10
percent.--By Marcia Wood,
Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
Gary J. Nelson,
Darshan S. Kelley, and colleagues
are at the USDA-ARS Western Human Nutrition Research Center, P.O. Box 29997,
Presidio of San Francisco, CA 94129;
[Nelson] phone (415) 556-0899, fax (415) 556-0425.
[Kelley] phone (415) 556-4381, fax (415) 556-1432.
"DHA Lowers Blood Tryglycerides in Diet Study" was
published in the September 1998 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
Click here
to see this issue's table of contents.
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