| Diet and Sudden Cardiac Death
Author: Leaf A.
Address: Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General
Hospital and the Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA,
USA. Aleaf@partners.org
Source: J Nutr Health Aging 2001;5(3):173-8
Abstract: The purpose of this paper is to review the
evidence that dietary factors, namely the ingestion
of the n-3 (or w-3) polyunsaturated fatty acids of fish
oils can prevent fatal cardiac arrhythmias (so-called
sudden cardiac death) in experimental animals, and probably
in humans as well. The mechanism for this striking effect
results from the ability of these fatty acids to directly
stabilize electrically every contractile myocyte in
the heart. This is accomplished by modulation by the
free n-3 fatty acids of the ionic currents in heart
cells; particularly the voltage-dependent sodium currents
which initiate action potentials and the L-type calcium
currents, which initiate release of sarcoplasmic reticulum
stores of calcium into the cytosol of heart cells. The
resultant rise in cytosolic calcium concentration initiates
contraction of the heart cells and the beating rate
of the heart. The gradually accumulating clinical evidence
that these fish oil fatty acids are potent preventors
of cardiac sudden death in humans will be reviewed.
With some 250,000 deaths occurring within one hour of
the onset of acute myocardial infarctions annually in
the USA alone and millions more in the whole world,
the potential large public health benefit from this
understanding is evident.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food
and Drug Administration.
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