Omega 3 and Cardiovascular Disease



Omega 3Clinical trials designed to indicate the cardiovascular benefits of oily fish are not limited to the U.S. The Diet and Reinfarction Trial (DART) and the Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della sopravvivenza nell ‘Myocardial Infarction (GISSI)-Prevenzione, in Europe, and the Japan EPA Lipid Intervention Study (JELIS), in Asia, show that regular consumption of fatty acids from oily fish prevents cardiovascular events in both primary and secondary form.

The average decrease in risk over 30%. The benefits do not follow the stroke, but cover the atherosclerotic disease and a broad range of arrhythmias.

On the latter, a study designed to investigate the benefits of omega 3 in the prevention of atrial fibrillation, an arrhythmia own people without apparent cardiovascular risk factors (smoking, obesity, hypertension or diabetes) but due to a excessive and continuous practice of intense physical exercise (cyclists, climbers, marathon runners, etc..), heart arrhythmias is beginning to feel the fifth or sixth decade of life.

In the study, also recognizes that a vegetable omega 3, linolenic acid (ALA), exercise a profit comparable to the fatty acids from fish. However, scientific evidence places the benefit of the latter “far short” of the animal.

FISH BLUE

The excellences that are attributed to the blue fish, especially tuna, are encountering a major problem for sustainability and biodiversity. There are 12 species of tuna that live in all oceans of the planet, but the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has already given a letter of “species near extinction,” to five (four of them in serious danger) : yellow fin tuna or light tuna (Thunnus albacares), southern bluefin tuna (Thunnus maccoyii), big-eyed tuna (Thunnus obesus), albacore (Thunnus alalunga) and bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus “).

Associations such as Greenpeace confirm that, after more than 3,000 years of fishing, bluefin tuna in the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean is on the brink of extinction. They stress that only 10 years have been enough of “uncontrolled development” by the fishing industry to the fence to endanger the survival of the species.

These partnerships are critical to the action taken by the European Union and Member States to protect bluefin tuna are inadequate and ignored complaints from fishermen, scientists, wholesale fish merchants, retail chains and NGOs like WWF. Bluefin tuna is the largest of this species. It differs from others in that its pectoral fin is shorter and the color of their flesh, darker. Frequents different waters, as with muscle activity can elevate your blood temperature above the water.

May reach three meters and weighing between 130 and 600 kg. Their life expectancy in the wild more than 20 years. It feeds on other smaller fish such as sardines, mackerel and horse mackerel. Their natural predators at sea are sharks and killer whales, although anyone who puts their survival at stake now is the human being.




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