What is it?
Fish oil can be obtained
        from eating fish or by taking supplements. Fish that are especially
        rich in the beneficial oils known as omega-3 fatty acids include
        mackerel, tuna, salmon, sturgeon, mullet, bluefish, anchovy, sardines,
        herring, trout, and menhaden. They provide about 1 gram of omega-3
        fatty acids in about 3.5 ounces of fish. 
          
        Fish oil supplements are usually made from mackerel, herring, tuna,
        halibut, salmon, cod liver, whale blubber, or seal blubber. Fish oil
        supplements often contain small amounts of vitamin E to prevent
        spoilage. They might also be combined with calcium, iron, or vitamins
        A, B1, B2, B3, C, or D. 
         
        Fish oil is used for a wide range of conditions. It is most often used
        for conditions related to the heart and blood system. Some people use
        fish oil to lower blood pressure or triglyceride levels (fats related
        to cholesterol). Fish oil has also been tried for preventing heart disease
        or stroke. The scientific evidence suggests that fish oil really does
        lower high triglycerides, and it also seems to help prevent heart
        disease and stroke when taken in the recommended amounts. Ironically,
        taking too much fish oil can actually increase the risk of stroke. 
         
        Fish may have earned its reputation as “brain food” because some people
        eat fish to help with depression, psychosis, attention
        deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), Alzheimer’s disease, and other
        thinking disorders. 
         
        Some people use fish oil for dry eyes, glaucoma, and age-related
        macular degeneration (AMD), a very common condition in older people
        that can lead to serious sight problems. 
         
        Women sometimes take fish oil to prevent painful periods; breast pain;
        and complications associated with pregnancy such as miscarriage, high
        blood pressure late in pregnancy, and early delivery. 
         
        Fish oil is also used for diabetes, asthma, developmental coordination
        disorders, movement disorders, dyslexia, obesity, kidney disease, weak
        bones (osteoporosis), certain diseases related to pain and swelling
        such as psoriasis, and preventing weight loss caused by some cancer
        drugs. 
         
        Fish oil is sometimes used after heart transplant surgery to prevent
        high blood pressure and kidney damage that can be caused by the surgery
        itself or by drugs used to reduce the chances that the body will reject
        the new heart. Fish oil is sometimes used after coronary artery bypass
        surgery. It seems to help keep the blood vessel that has been rerouted
        from closing up. 
         
        When fish oil is obtained by eating fish, the way the fish is prepared
        seems to make a difference. Eating broiled or baked fish appears to
        reduce the risk of heart disease, but eating fried fish or fish
        sandwiches not only cancels out the benefits of fish oil, but may
        actually increase heart disease risk. 
         
        Two of the most important omega-3 fatty acids contained in fish oil are
        eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA). See
        separate listings for EPA and DHA. 
How
        effective is it?
Natural Medicines Comprehensive
        Database rates effectiveness based
        on scientific evidence according to the following scale: Effective,
        Likely Effective, Possibly Effective, Possibly Ineffective, Likely
        Ineffective, Ineffective, and Insufficient Evidence to Rate. 
         
        The effectiveness ratings for FISH OIL are as follows: 
Effective for...
- High triglycerides. High triglycerides
             are associated with heart disease and untreated diabetes. To
             reduce the risk of heart disease, doctors believe it is important
             to keep triglycerides below a certain level. Doctors usually
             recommend increasing physical activity and restricting dietary fat
             to lower triglycerides. Sometimes they also prescribe drugs such
             as gemfibrozil (Lopid) for use in addition to these lifestyle
             changes. Now researchers believe that fish oil, though not as
             effective as gemfibrozil, can reduce triglyceride levels by 20% to
             50%. One particular fish oil supplement called Lovaza has been
             approved by the FDA to lower triglycerides. Lovaza contains 465
             milligrams of EP and 375 milligrams of DHA in 1-gram capsules.
 
 
Likely effective for...
- Heart disease. Fish oil may be
             effective in keeping people with healthy hearts free of heart
             disease. People who already have heart disease may be able to
             lower their risk of dying from heart disease by taking fish oil.
             Though not all researchers agree, some investigators believe that
             fish oil may be even more effective in reducing death from heart
             attacks than a group of commonly used cholesterol-lowering drugs called
             “statins.”
 
 
Possibly effective for...
- High blood pressure. Fish oil seems to
             produce modest reductions in blood pressure in people with high
             blood pressure. The omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil seem to be
             able to expand blood vessels, and this brings blood pressure down.
 
- Rheumatoid arthritis. Fish oil alone, or in
             combination with the drug naproxen (Naprosyn), seems to help
             people with rheumatoid arthritis get over morning stiffness
             faster. People who take fish oil can sometimes reduce their use of
             pain medications such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
             (NSAIDs).
 
- Menstrual pain
             (dysmenorrhea).
             Taking fish oil alone or in combination with vitamin B12 seems to
             improve painful periods and reduce the need for pain medications
             such as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS).
 
- Attention
             deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children. Taking fish oil seems
             to improve thinking skills and behavior in 8 to 12 year-old
             children with ADHD.
 
- Raynaud’s syndrome. There’s some evidence
             that taking fish oil can improve cold tolerance in some people
             with the usual form of Raynaud’s syndrome. But people with
             Raynaud’s syndrome caused by a condition called progressive
             systemic sclerosis don’t seem to benefit from fish oil
             supplements.
 
- Stroke. Moderate fish
             consumption (once or twice a week) seems to lower the risk of
             having a stroke by as much as 27%. However, eating fish doesn’t
             lower stroke risk in people who are already taking aspirin for
             prevention. On the other hand, very high fish consumption (more
             than 46 grams of fish per day) seems to increase stroke risk,
             perhaps even double it.
 
- Weak bones
             (osteoporosis).
             Taking fish oil alone or in combination with calcium and evening
             primrose oil seems to slow bone loss rate and increase bone
             density at the thigh bone (femur) and spine in elderly people with
             osteoporosis.
 
- Hardening of the
             arteries (atherosclerosis).
             Fish oil seems to slow or slightly reverse the progress of
             atherosclerosis in the arteries serving the heart (coronary
             arteries), but not in the arteries that bring blood up the neck to
             the head (carotid arteries).
 
- Kidney problems. Long-term use (two
             years) of fish oil 4-8 grams daily can slow the loss of kidney
             function in high-risk patients with a kidney disease called IgA
             nephropathy. Fish oil also seems to reduce the amount of protein
             in the urine of people who have kidney disease as a result of
             diabetes.
 
- Bipolar disorder. Taking fish oil with
             the usual treatments for bipolar disorder seems to improve
             symptoms of depression and increase the length of time between
             episodes of depression. But fish oil doesn’t seem to improve manic
             symptoms in people with bipolar disorder.
 
- Psychosis. Taking a fish oil
             supplement might help prevent full psychotic illness from developing
             in people with mild symptoms. This has only been tested in
             teenagers and adults up to age 25.
 
- Weight loss. Some evidence shows
             that eating fish improves weight loss and decreases blood sugar in
             overweight people and people with high blood pressure. Preliminary
             research also shows that taking a specific fish oil supplement 6
             grams daily (Hi-DHA, NuMega), providing 260 mg DHA/gram and 60 mg
             EPA/gram, significantly decreases body fat when combined with
             exercise.
 
- Endometrial cancer. There is some
             evidence that women who regularly eat about two servings of fatty
             fish per week have a reduced risk of developing endometrial
             cancer.
 
- Age-related eye disease
             (age-related macular degeneration, AMD). There is some
             evidence that people who eat fish more than once per week have a
             lower risk of developing age-related macular degeneration.
 
- Reducing the risk of
             blood vessel re-blockage after heart bypass surgery or “balloon”
             catheterization (balloon angioplasty). Fish oil appears to
             decrease the rate of re-blockage up to 26% when given for one
             month before the procedure and continued for one month thereafter.
             Apparently, taking fish oil before surgery is important. When
             taken for less than one month before angioplasty, fish oil doesn’t
             help protect the blood vessel against closing down.
 
- Recurrent miscarriage
             in pregnant women with antiphospholipid syndrome. Taking fish oil seems
             to prevent miscarriage and increase live birth rate in pregnant
             women with a condition called antiphospholipid syndrome.
 
- High blood pressure and
             kidney problems after heart transplant. Taking fish oil seems
             to preserve kidney function and reduce the long-term continuous
             rise in blood pressure after heart transplantation.
 
- Damage to the kidneys
             and high blood pressure caused by taking a drug called cyclosporine. Cyclosporine is a
             medication that reduces the chance of organ rejection after an
             organ transplant. Fish oil might help reduce some of the unwanted
             side effects of treatment with this drug.
 
- Movement disorder in
             children (dyspraxia).
             Taking fish oil orally, in combination with evening primrose oil,
             thyme oil, and vitamin E (Efalex, Efamol Ltd), seems to improve
             movement disorders in children with dyspraxia.
 
- Developmental
             coordination disorder.
             A combination of fish oil (80%) and evening primrose oil (20%)
             seems to improve reading, spelling, and behavior when given to
             children age 5-12 years with developmental coordination disorder.
             However, it doesn’t seem to improve motor skills.
 
- Preventing blockage of
             grafts used in kidney dialysis. Taking fish oil orally seems to help prevent
             clot formation in hemodialysis grafts.
 
- Psoriasis. There is some
             evidence that administering fish oil intravenously (by IV) can
             decrease severe psoriasis symptoms. But taking fish oil by mouth
             doesn’t seem to have any effect on psoriasis.
 
- High cholesterol. There is interest in
             using fish oil in combination with “statin” drugs for some people
             with high cholesterol. Doctors were worried at first that taking
             fish oil might interfere with statin treatment, but early studies
             show this is not a problem, at least with the statin called
             simvastatin. Scientists think fish oil may lower cholesterol by
             keeping it from being absorbed in the intestine. There is some
             evidence that using vitamin B12 along with fish oil might boost
             their ability to lower cholesterol.
 
- Coronary artery bypass
             surgery. Taking fish oil seems
             to prevent coronary artery bypass grafts from re-closing following
             coronary artery bypass surgery.
 
- Cancer-related weight
             loss. Taking a high dose
             (7.5 grams per day) of fish oil seems to slow weight loss in some
             cancer patients. Some researchers believe these patients eat more
             because the fish oil is fighting depression and improving their
             mood.
 
- Asthma. Some research
             suggests fish oil may lower the occurrence of asthma in infants and
             children when taken by women late in pregnancy. Furthermore, fish
             oil seems to improve airflow, reduce cough, and lower the need for
             medications in some children with asthma. However, fish oil
             treatment doesn’t seem to provide the same benefit for adults.
 
 
Possibly ineffective for...
- Gum infection
             (gingivitis).
 
- Liver disease.
 
- Leg pain due to blood
             flow problems (claudication).
 
- Preventing migraine
             headaches.
 
- Preventing muscle
             soreness caused by physical exercise.
 
- Breast pain.
 
- Skin rashes caused by
             allergic reactions.
 
- Stomach ulcers.
 
-  
 
 
How does it work?
  
A lot of the benefit of fish
        oil seems to come from the omega-3 fatty acids that it contains.
        Interestingly, the body does not produce its own omega-3 fatty acids.
        Nor can the body make omega-3 fatty acids from omega-6 fatty acids,
        which are common in the Western diet. A lot of research has been done
        on EPA and DHA, two types of omega-3 acids that are often included in
        fish oil supplements. 
         
        Omega-3 fatty acids reduce pain and swelling. This may explain why fish
        oil is likely effective for psoriasis and dry eyes. These fatty acids
        also prevent the blood from clotting easily. this might make fish oil
        helpful for some heart conditions. 
Are there safety concerns?
Fish oil is LIKELY SAFE
        for most people, including pregnant and breast-feeding women, when
        taken in low doses (3 grams or less per day). There are some safety
        concerns when fish oil is taken in high doses. Taking more than 3 grams
        per day might keep blood from clotting and can increase the chance of
        bleeding. 
         
        High doses of fish oil might also reduce the immune system’s activity,
        reducing the body’s ability to fight infection. This is a special
        concern for people taking medications to reduce their immune system’s
        activity (organ transplant patients, for example) and the elderly. 
         
        Only take high doses of fish oil while under medical supervision. 
         
        Fish oil can cause side effects including belching, bad breath,
        heartburn, nausea, loose stools, rash, and nosebleeds. Taking fish oil
        supplements with meals or freezing them can often decrease these side
        effects. 
         
        Consuming large amounts of fish oil from some DIETARY sources is POSSIBLY
        UNSAFE. Some fish meats (especially shark, king mackerel, and
        farm-raised salmon) can be contaminated with mercury and other
        industrial and environmental chemicals, but fish oil supplements
        typically do not contain these contaminants. 
Special precautions & warnings:
Liver disease: Fish oil might increase the risk of bleeding. 
         
        Fish or seafood allergy: Some people who are allergic to seafood
        such as fish might also be allergic to fish oil supplements. There is
        no reliable information showing how likely people with seafood allergy
        are to have an allergic reaction to fish oil; however, until more is
        known advise patients allergic to seafood to avoid or use fish oil
        supplements cautiously. 
         
        Bipolar disorder: Taking fish oil might increase some of the
        symptoms of this condition. 
         
        Depression: Taking fish oil might increase some of the symptoms
        of this condition. 
         
        Diabetes: There is some concern that taking high doses of fish
        oil might make the control of blood sugar more difficult. 
         
        High blood pressure: Fish oil can lower blood pressure and might
        cause blood pressure to drop too low in people who are being treated
        with blood pressure-lowering medications. 
         
        HIV/AIDS and other conditions in which the immune system response is
        lowered: Higher doses of fish oil can lower the body’s immune
        system response. This could be a problem for people whose immune system
        is already weak. 
         
        An implanted defibrillator (a surgically placed device to
        prevent irregular heartbeat): Some, but not all, research suggests that
        fish oil might increase the risk of irregular heartbeat in patients
        with an implanted defibrillator. Stay on the safe side by avoiding fish
        oil supplements. 
What dose is used?
The following doses have
        been studied in scientific research: 
         
        BY MOUTH: 
- For high triglycerides:
             1-4 grams/day of fish oil.
 
- For high blood
             pressure: Either 4 grams of fish oil or fish oil providing 2.04
             grams of EPA and 1.4 grams of DHA per day. 
 
- For atrial fibrillation
             (one of the chambers of the heart doesn’t empty properly and this
             increases the risk of blood clot formation leading to stroke):
             Eating tuna or baked or broiled fish providing omega-3 fatty acids
             (fish oil) one or more times per week seems to reduce the risk of
             atrial fibrillation in patients aged 65 or older compared to
             consuming fish once per month or less. But there is no benefit
             from eating fried fish or a fish sandwich. 
 
- For kidney problems
             related to using cyclosporine to prevent organ transplant
             rejection: 12 grams/day containing 2.2 grams EPA and 1.4 grams
             DHA.
 
- For reducing the
             overall risk of death and risk of sudden death in patients with
             coronary heart disease: Fish oil providing 0.3-6 grams of EPA with
             0.6 to 3.7 grams of DHA. 
 
- For asthma in children:
             Fish oil providing 17-26.8 mg/kg EPA and 7.3-11.5 mg/kg DHA for
             reducing symptoms. Maternal ingestion of fish oil 4 grams daily,
             providing 32% EPA and 23% DHA with tocopherol, during late-phase
             pregnancy has been used for preventing the development of asthma
             in children. 
 
- For preventing
             childhood allergies: Maternal ingestion of fish oil 4 grams daily,
             providing 32% EPA and 23% DHA with tocopherol, during late-phase
             pregnancy.
 
- For preventing
             childhood atopic dermatitis: Maternal ingestion of fish oil 4
             grams daily, providing 32% EPA and 23% DHA with tocopherol, during
             late-phase pregnancy.
 
- For treating asthma:
             17-26.8 mg/kg EPA and 7.3-11.5 mg/kg DHA.
 
- For preventing and
             reversing the progression of hardening of the arteries: 6
             grams/day of fish oil for the first three months, followed by 3
             grams/day thereafter.
 
- For rheumatoid
             arthritis: Fish oil providing 3.8 grams/day of EPA and 2 grams/day
             DHA.
 
- For attention
             deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): A specific supplement
             containing fish oil 400 mg and evening primrose oil 100 mg (Eye Q,
             Novasel) six capsules daily.
 
- For preventing
             miscarriage in women with antiphospholipid antibody syndrome and a
             history of past miscarriage: 5.1 grams fish oil with a 1.5 EPA:DHA
             ratio.
 
- For painful menstrual
             periods: A daily dose of EPA 1080 mg and DHA 720 mg.
 
- For Raynaud’s syndrome:
             A daily dose of 3.96 grams EPA and 2.64 grams DHA.
 
- For weight loss: A
             daily serving of 2-7 ounces of fish containing approximately 3.65
             grams omega-3 fatty acids (0.66 gram from EPA and 0.60 gram from
             DHA).
 
- For slowing weight loss
             in patients with cancer: 7.5 grams/day of fish oil providing EPA
             4.7 grams and DHA 2.8 grams.
 
- For improving movement
             disorders in children with poor coordination (dyspraxia): Fish oil
             providing DHA 480 mg combined with 35 mg arachidonic acid and 96
             mg gamma-alpha linoleic acid from evening primrose oil, 24 mg
             thyme oil, and 80 mg vitamin E (Efalex).
 
- For developmental
             coordination disorder in children: Fish oil providing EPA 558 mg
             and DHA 174 in 3 divided doses.
 
- For depression along
             with conventional antidepressants: Fish oil 9.6 grams/day.
 
- To prevent full
             psychosis from developing in people with mild symptoms: Fish oil
             1.2 grams/day.
 
- For keeping veins open
             after coronary bypass surgery: 4 grams/day of fish oil containing
             EPA 2.04 grams and DHA 1.3 grams.
 
- For preventing the
             collapse of arteries opened by “balloon” therapy (PTCA): 6
             grams/day of fish oil starting one month before PTCA and
             continuing one month after PTCA, followed by 3 grams of fish oil
             daily thereafter for six months.
 
- For reducing and
             preventing the long-term continuous rise in blood pressure and to
             preserve kidney function after heart transplantation: 4 grams/day
             of fish oil (46.5% EPA and 37.8% DHA).
 
- For preventing clotting
             after placement of a tube for dialysis: 6 grams/day of fish oil.
 
- For preserving kidney
             function in patients with severe IgA nephropathy: 4-8 grams/day of
             fish oil has been used.
 
- For combined high
             triglycerides and high cholesterol: Fish oil providing EPA
             1800-2160 mg and DHA 1200-1440 mg combined with garlic powder
             900-1200 mg/day has been used to lower total cholesterol, LDL,
             triglycerides, and the ratios of total cholesterol to HDL, and LDL
             to HDL.
 
- For salicylate
             intolerance: Fish oil 10 grams daily.
 
 
  
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