| Diet high in fish linked to stronger bones, study finds |
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| Sunday, 24 April 2011 12:55 |
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![]() “We think omega 3 fatty acids from fish help to prevent” bone loss, said lead researcher Dr. Katherine Tucker, a professor at Northeastern University. But her study finds that preventing bone loss is not as simple as upping the levels of omega 3 fats in people’s diet. Her group looked at surveys, collected in the 1980s and 90s, of the eating habits of more than 600 seniors who lived in Framingham, Massachusetts. Measurements of the bone density in their hips were taken 4 years apart. Women who ate three or more weekly servings of dark fish, such as salmon or mackerel, had smaller amounts of bone loss 4 years later, compared to women who ate less fish. Men who ate dark fish or tuna at least three times per week also had less bone loss than other men. The study was unable to show that fish was the cause of the differences in bone loss, but merely that the two are associated. Fish are rich in the omega 3 fatty acids, EPA and DHA. Looking further into what people ate, the researchers broke down how much of both omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids people were getting in their diet. |