Fatty
acids: food for thought
Not
all fatty foods are bad for us. The right fats, says Annalisa
Barbieri, can help to prevent cancer, heart disease and
depression - and may even improve our brainpower.
Really, what chance do fatty acids have? Nothing about the
name makes you want to befriend them. The question of whether
you're getting enough in your diet would illicit not concern,
but rather a response of "Urgh, hope not." They
sound most unappealing. This is a shame, because fatty acids
can be wonderful.
If
you have eczema, psoriasis, cracked heels, dry skin or depression;
if you suffer from menstrual pain or premenstrual problems;
if you have a child who is hyperactive or who has attention-deficiency
syndrome or dyslexia, then maybe you should think about inviting
fatty acids round to dinner.
Last
week interim results were published of a study in which 120
children with various learning difficulties were given a supplement
called Eye-Q, which contained fatty acids (primarily the essential
fatty acid, Omega-3) in the form of marine oil and evening
primrose extract. After 12 weeks (the study is to last 24),
"many children have had their reading age boosted by
between one and two years, and in one child it rose four years",
said the educational psychologist at Durham County Council
who is conducting the trial.
This
is the latest in many promising test results. Omega-3 fatty
acids (most prolifically found in fish oils and linseeds)
have also been shown to be powerful antidepressants, alleviate
arthritic pain, and help prevent heart disease, cancer and
Crohn's disease. Omega-3, like its sibling Omega-6, is a fatty
acid. More than that, they are essential fatty acids (EFA),
called essential simply because they are; we can't manufacture
them in our bodies, so we need to get them via our food, or
supplements. EFAs are part of a larger group of unsaturated
fatty acids and they also help with cognitive skills: they
help us concentrate and comprehend, which is why a lack of
them can result in depression in adults and "learning
difficulties" in children.
Fat
makes up two-thirds of our brains. Cells communicate via neurone
transmitters, which need fat to function. Fat is the glue
holding everything together, enabling information to pass
from one cell to another. This is why babies aged up to two
years need a high-fat diet as their brains form, and why one
of the first symptoms of cutting too much fat out of your
diet is depression (which is why so few people can stick to
low-fat diets). And cell membranes made from Omega-3s have
also been found to be more elastic (one reasons why they are
beneficial to the heart), and therefore more helpful in passing
messages along between cells.
But
we've all become so scared offat even good fat
that many of us lack EFAs. "Fifty per cent of people
that I see are lacking in, or have an imbalance of, EFAs,"
says Vicki Edgson, a nutrition consultant and co-founder of
The Food Doctor (www. thefooddoctor.com), a consultancy that,
as the name suggests, aims to encourageoptimum health through
nutrition. And the figure of 50 per cent only accounts for
those who are concerned enough about nutrition to make it
through her door.
Fatty
acids come from fat. Everything we eat that is fat has fatty
acids in it. Whether it's a doughnut or a mackerel determines
the type of fat (ergo fatty acid) we take in. Break it down
further, and this fatty acid can be an EFA, which is what
Omega-3 or Omega-6s are. There are two others: Omega-9 and
-12, found in palm and coconut oil, and much more prevalent
in African and Caribbean diets with good reason: they
have a particular effect on the production of melanin.
Omega-3s
and -6s do different things. The former has anti-inflammatory
properties, and is an anti-coagulant. This is why it's so
helpful for period pain, arthritis, and preventing heart disease.
Omega-6s have the opposite effect. "The reason we need
a balance of the two," explains Edgson, "is that
without Omega-6s our blood would be too thin to carry nutrients
around the body, we'd bleed to death if we cut ourselves,
and we need some inflammation so that our body can tell when
it's in distress."
So
why are Omega-3s so often seen as the good guys, and Omega-6s
as the bad? All but the healthiest of Western diets have an
imbalance of Omega-6s. This is because we eat a lot of vegetable
oils that are rich in Omega-6s, such as corn or sunflower
oil, margarines made from such, or food cooked in these oils.
All oils have a mixture of the two Omegas, but usually they
have much more Omega-6s than -3s. The exception to this is
linseed (also known as flax seed) oil, or rapeseed (known
as canola in the US) oil, which has more Omega-3s than -6s.
Omega-3s
are found in large quantities in oily fish, and in linseeds
and walnuts. "Ideally, the balance in our diet should
be 3:1 in favour of Omega-6s," says Edgson, "but
it's more like 6:1." Probably the healthiest diets for
EFAs are the Mediterranean and Japanese diets, which include
lots of fish, nuts, seeds and olive oil. Both nations have
much lower rates of heart disease and of some cancers than
we do, although as they become seduced by the world of fast
food, they're catching up with us fast.
For
nearly five months I've been following a more nutritionally
dense diet, one aspect of which includes eating higher-fat
food than ever before in my adult life: 30 per cent of my
daily calorific intake comes from good fats. I eat oily fish
and avocados twice a week, other fish at least once; I put
a cocktail of linseeds, sunflower and pumpkin seeds, walnuts
or almonds into my bi-weekly salad; my breakfast is toast
with a nut butter. All my vegetables are glossily coated in
olive oil; I use rapeseed oil to sauté. My periods
once prolonged, heavy, painful and preceded by every
premenstrual symptom known, are dramatically improved.
Edgson
recommends "eating a portion of oily fish [such as mackerel,
salmon, sardines] two to three times a week. Get a tablespoon
of sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds and linseeds, roughly grind
them and then sprinkle that into soups, and on to your morning
muesli or cereal. Don't go for low-fat dressing options on
your salad, as you'll be missing out on valuable oils."
Supplements
are best taken with the advice of a professional, because
they can be expensive and what you need may vary from time
to time. But such advice is free at your local health-food
shop. Personally I take linseed-oil capsules (because I hate
the taste of linseed oil) to top up my diet when I think it
needs it, or GLA supplements (gamma linolenic acid).
But
if none of this convinces you, maybe vanity will. I told Vicki
Edgson that, despite the fact that I am doing no more exercise
than I was before, I have become much leaner on this regime.
"Ah, that's because you need essential fats to get rid
of saturated fats," she said. "When saturated fat
is left in the body for a long time, it becomes like lard
[ie cellulite]. If those fatty cell membranes don't have fat
available to them, they harden, trapping fat inside."
See?
Source:
The Independent Newspaper UK
22 May 2002
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