| Fish Intake Lowers Risk of
Stroke in Men
Source: The Journal of the American Medical Association
2002; 288: 3130-3136
03/01/03 - Men who eat fish once a month or more have
a reduced risk of ischemic stroke, compared with those
who eat fish less often, according to researchers reporting
in the December 25 issue of The Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA).
The authors noted that the effect of fish consumption
or long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA)
intake on risk of stroke remains uncertain. They set
out to examine further this relation between fish intake
and risk of stroke in men.
Dr Ka He, from the Harvard School of Public Health,
Boston, and colleagues, studied more than 43,000 men
participating in the Health Professional Follow-up Study
(HPFS), a large cohort of men who periodically completed
dietary measurements during 12 years of follow-up.
The men aged 40 to 75 years completed a detailed and
validated food frequency questionnaire and were free
from cardiovascular diseases at baseline in 1986. The
researchers determined the relative risk (RR) of stroke
by subtype based on the cumulative average fish consumption
or long-chain Omega-3 fatty acid intake, ascertained
in 1986, 1990, and 1994.
In the 12 year follow-up, 608 participants developed
stroke. Among these cases, 377 were confirmed as ischemic
stroke, 106 were identified as haemorrhagic stroke,
and the remainder could not be classified from the available
medical documentation.
"For cumulative average fish consumption, the
risk of ischemic stroke was lower among men in each
category of fish consumption compared with those who
ate fish less than once per month. Even a small amount
of fish consumption (1-3 times per month) was associated
with a significant reduction of 43 percent in risk of
ischemic stroke," wrote the authors.
However no further benefit was observed at higher levels
of fish intake. The RR for those who ate fish five or
more times per week was 46 percent lower, they said.
Men who consumed fish at least once per month had a
44 percent lower risk of ischemic stroke compared with
those who ate fish less than once per month. Risk of
haemorrhagic stroke was not significantly associated
with fish intake.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
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