>From another list:

 Depression & Omega-3 Fatty Acids

I though everyone might like to see this important
research report that came over the wire a few days ago.

Fish Oil May Help Relieve Stubborn Depression
Thu Oct 17,11:21 AM ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Daily supplements of an
omega-3 fatty acid--found in fish and fish oil--may
help alleviate the symptoms of depression in patients
who do not respond to standard antidepressant
medications, new research findings suggest.

Dr. Malcolm Peet of the Swallownest Court Hospital in
Sheffield, England and his colleague found that
depressed patients who received a daily dose of 1 gram
of an omega-3 fatty acid for 12 weeks experienced a
decrease in their symptoms, such as sadness, anxiety
and sleeping problems.

The only side effect of the treatment appeared to be
gastrointestinal problems, which Peet and his
co-author Dr. David F. Horrobin of Laxdale Research,
Ltd. in Stirling, Scotland, deemed "mild."

All of the patients had tried other medications before
enrolling in the current study, including selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) such as Prozac
and medications from an older family of drugs called
tricyclic antidepressants. Both types of drug are
considered standard treatments for depression.

This is not the first study to suggest that omega-3
fatty acids, such as the form of eicosapenaenoic acid
(EPA) used in this report, may help patients with
psychiatric disorders. Previous researchers have
suggested that the balance of omega-3 fatty acids in
the brain may become skewed in people with depression,
and earlier studies have shown that fish oil
supplements can help alleviate the symptoms of
schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, or manic
depression. 

In addition, researchers have found that people who
are depressed, as well as those diagnosed with
cardiovascular diseases and other conditions
associated with depression, have relatively low levels
of omega-3 fatty acids in their blood.

In the current study, reported in the October issue of
the Archives of General Psychiatry, Peet and Horrobin
asked 70 depressed patients who had not benefited from
previous treatments to take a daily dose of either 1
gram, 2 grams or 4 grams of EPA, or an inactive drug.
The treatment lasted 12 weeks.

The investigators found that people given the 1 gram
daily EPA dose experienced improvements--relative to
those given the inactive drug--in all of the measured
aspects of depression, including sadness, anxiety, low
libido and suicidal tendencies. In fact, 69% of the
patients treated with the 1-gram daily dose achieved a
50% reduction in their symptoms of depression, a
result seen in only 25% of the patients given an
inactive drug. 

"The effect of ethyl-eicosapentaenoate (the form of
EPA used) applies to all major components of the
depressive syndrome and is seen equally in the patient
and physician assessments," the authors write.

Peet and Horrobin did not note any improvements in the
patients given higher doses of the fatty acid relative
to the placebo group, which they suggested may be due
to the small number of people who were given either 2
grams or 4 grams per day.

"Although there appeared to be a trend toward
significant efficacy at the 4-gram per day dosage,
larger studies would be required to elucidate possible
beneficial effects of the higher dosages," they write.

SOURCE: Archives of General Psychiatry
2002;59:913-919.
--------------------

Those of you who would like to learn more about the benefits of fish
oil, as well as the different grades of fish oil currently available,
can visit:

http://www.authentic-breathing.com/fish_oil.htm



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