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Supplement: n3 Fatty Acids: Recommendations for Therapeutics and Prevention |
1 From the Laboratory of Membrane Biochemistry and Biophysics and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD
ABSTRACT
Background: The worldwide diversity of dietary intakes of n6 and n3 fatty acids influences tissue compositions of n3 long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs: eicosapentaenoic, docosapentaenoic, and docosahexaenoic acids) and risks of cardiovascular and mental illnesses.
Objective: We aimed to estimate healthy dietary allowances for n3 LCFAs that would meet the nutrient requirements of 9798% of the population.
Design: Deficiency in n3 LCFAs was defined as attributable risk from 13 morbidity and mortality outcomes, including all causes, coronary heart disease, stroke, cardiovascular disease, homicide, bipolar disorder, and major and postpartum depressions. Dietary availability of n3 LCFAs from commodities for 38 countries and tissue composition data were correlated by best fit to each illness in deficiency risk models.
Results: The potential attributable burden of disease ranged from 20.8% (all-cause mortality in men) to 99.9% (bipolar disorder). n3 LCFA intake for Japan (0.37% of energy, or 750 mg/d) met criteria for uniformly protecting >98% of the populations worldwide. n3 LCFA intakes needed to meet a tissue target representative of Japan (60% n3 in LCFA) ranged from 278 mg/d (Philippines, with intakes of 0.8% of energy as linoleate, 0.08% of energy as
-linolenate, and 0.06% of energy as arachidonic acid) to 3667 mg/d (United States, with 8.91% of energy as linoleate, 1.06% of energy as
- linolenate, and 0.08% of energy as arachidonic acid).
Conclusions: With caveats inherent for ecologic, nutrient disappearance analyses, a healthy dietary allowance for n3 LCFAs for current US diets was estimated at 3.5 g/d for a 2000-kcal diet. This allowance for n3 LCFAs can likely be reduced to one-tenth of that amount by consuming fewer n6 fats.
Key Words: n3 Fatty acids Dietary Reference Intake Adequate Intake Recommended Dietary Allowance docosahexaenoic acid eicosapentaenoic acid arachidonic acid linoleic acid dose-response study omega-3 fatty acids
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