How Fish Oil Helps You Avoid Brain Damaging
Alzheimers Plaque
UCLA study finds anti-Alzheimer's mechanism in
omega-3 fatty acids
Dec. 26, 2007 - It's good news that we are living
longer, but bad news that the longer we live, the better our odds of
developing late-onset Alzheimer's disease. Many Alzheimer's researchers
have long touted fish oil, by pill or diet, as an accessible and
inexpensive "weapon" that may delay or prevent this debilitating
disease. Now, UCLA scientists have confirmed that fish oil is indeed a
deterrent against Alzheimer's, and they have identified the reasons why.
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Reporting in the current issue of the Journal of
Neuroscience, now online, Greg Cole, professor of medicine and neurology
at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and associate director of
UCLA's Alzheimer Disease Research Center, and his colleagues report that
the omega-3 fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) found in fish oil
increases the production of LR11, a protein that is found at reduced
levels in Alzheimer's patients and which is known to destroy the protein
that forms the "plaques" associated with the disease.
The plaques are deposits of a protein called beta
amyloid that is thought to be toxic to neurons in the brain, leading to
Alzheimer's. Since having high levels of LR11 prevents the toxic plaques
from being made, low levels in patients are believed to be a factor in
causing the disease.
Alzheimer's is a debilitating neurodegenerative
disease that causes memory loss, dementia, personality change and
ultimately death. The national Alzheimer's Association estimates that
5.1 million Americans are currently afflicted with the disease and
predicts that the number may increase to between 11 million and 16
million people by the year 2050.
The researchers examined the effects of fish oil,
or its component DHA, in multiple biological systems and administered
the oil or fatty acid by diet and by adding it directly to neurons grown
in the laboratory.
"We found that even low doses of DHA increased the
levels of LR11 in rat neurons, while dietary DHA increased LR11 in
brains of rats or older mice that had been genetically altered to
develop Alzheimer's disease," said Cole, who is also associate director
of the Geriatric Research Center at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
To show that the benefits of DHA were not limited
to nonhuman animal cells, the researchers also confirmed a direct impact
of DHA on human neuronal cells in culture as well. Thus, high levels of
DHA leading to abundant LR11 seem to protect against Alzheimer's, Cole
said, while low LR11 levels lead to formation of the amyloid plaques.
Fish oil and its key ingredient, omega-3 fatty
acids (found in fatty fish like salmon), have been a mainstay of
alternative health practitioners for years and have been endorsed by the
American Heart Association to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease.
Fatty acids like DHA are considered "essential"
fatty acids because the body cannot make them from other sources and
must obtain them through diet. Years of research have shown that DHA is
the most abundant essential fatty acid in the brain, Cole said, and that
it is critical to fetal and infant brain development.
Studies have also linked low levels of DHA in the
brain to cognitive impairment and have shown that lower levels may
increase oxidative stress in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.
Based on the positive results, the National
Institutes of Health is currently conducting a large-scale clinical
trial with DHA in patients with established Alzheimer's disease. For
those patients, Cole said, it may be too late in the disease's
progression for DHA to have much effect.
But he is hopeful that the NIH will conduct a
large-scale prevention clinical trial using fish oil at the earliest
stages of the disease particularly because it is unlikely that a
pharmaceutical company will do so, since fish oil in pill form is
readily available and inexpensive.
Still to be determined, he said, "is what the
optimal dose should be. It could be that a smaller amount might be
helpful, especially in a place like the south of France, where people
are already on a Mediterranean diet."
Here in the United States, though, where fish
consumption is not very high, the dose may need to be higher.
"There's a deficiency of DHA to begin with," Cole
said, "and this may contribute to the low LR11 seen in many Alzheimer's
patients."
Editor's Notes:
In addition to Cole, authors included Qui-Lan Ma,
Bruce Teter, Oliver J. Ubede, Takashi Morihara, Dilsher Dhoot, Michael
D. Nyby, Michael L. Tuck and Sally A. Frautschy, all of UCLA.
Funding for the research was provided by a grant
from the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. The
research was initiated with support from the National Institute on
Aging.
The UCLA Department of Neurology encompasses more
than a dozen research, clinical and teaching programs. These programs
cover brain mapping and neuro-imaging, movement disorders, Alzheimer's
disease, multiple sclerosis, neurogenetics, nerve and muscle disorders,
epilepsy, neuro-oncology, neurotology, neuropsychology, headaches and
migraines, neurorehabilitation, and neurovascular disorders. The
department ranked No. 1 in 2005 and 2006 among its peers nationwide in
National Institutes of Health funding. For more information, visit
http://neurology.medsch.ucla.edu.