Fish Oil Fails to Hold Off Heart Arrhythmia

Atrial fibrillation patients who took the capsules had about as many episodes as those on placebo

November 16, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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By Nathan Seppa, Science News

CHICAGO—Fish oil, which has shown signs of benefit for the heart, doesn’t seem to help people with atrial fibrillation, the most common type of heart arrhythmia, researchers reported November 15 at a meeting of the American Heart Association.

Atrial fibrillation is a form of heart arrhythmia in which scrambled electrical impulses cause heart muscles to contract abnormally. Diets high in fish have been associated with protection against heart attacks and heart failure, and the omega-3 fatty acids in fish oil had been shown in some studies, but not others, to benefit irregular heartbeat.

In the new study, researchers randomly assigned 527 people with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation to get either high-dose fish oil or a placebo capsule. In these patients, an irregular heart rhythm crops up periodically but returns to normal on its own, said study coauthor Peter Kowey, a cardiologist at the Lankenau Hospital in Wynnewood, Penn. Despite the irregular heartbeat from time to time, he said, “this is a relatively healthy population.”

After six months, about half in each group had a recurrence and there was no clear difference between groups in the number of episodes experienced.  A smaller test comparing patients who had a more persistent form of atrial fibrillation that doesn’t self-correct also showed no apparent benefit from fish oil.

“The fact that this drug failed in this population, in my opinion, makes it highly unlikely that you would see efficacy in other groups,” Kowey said.

But Christine Albert, a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, said that further study will be needed, particularly since past results have been mixed and this trial lasted only six months. “There may be different effects in different populations,” she said, “and some of these effects might take time.”

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Tags:
heart health,
over the counter drugs,
arrhythmia,
health,
diet and nutrition,
heart disease

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Treating arrhythmia the standard way (drugs + operations) can be pretty expensive. Of course, in some cases this is the only cure, but in other cases arrhythmia can be cured and can ONLY be cured by following a certain diet. But you have go through some tests first to see if your arrhythmia is caused by a physical flaw in your heart or from other factors (stress, bad nutrition, etc.). How do I know it works? I'm a living example! None of three different pills doctors prescribed me had any effect, but the change of diet did. Read my whole story (along with complete medical documentation) here:

http://www.mcarticles.com/a/how-i-cured-my-arrhythmia-a-personal-story

nmajca 6:51AM August 31, 2011

First, I do medical research, so I am trained to do analysis.

After reading some of the studies that started to appear a few years ago that said omega-3's could reduce Afib and arrythmias, I raised the dose I was taking from 1,000 mg a day net EPA/DHA to 3,000 mg net EPA/DHA per day, with a product that is mostly DHA -- Jarrow Formula's MaxDHA, which is a triglyceride version of omega-3. This is somewhat different than Lovaza, an ethyl ester.

So I take 6 capsules twice a day, which gives about 3,000 mg of DHA and 400 mg of EPA. After 20+ years of trying to deal with afib, I found that I had no problem when I took this high dose. For two years it worked, and then I suddenly had an AFib. I realized that because I hate taking pills I had only taken 6 caps in the morning, with no night dose for about three weeks. So, I figured the half dose wasn't enough to work. Resuming the full 12 capsules a day and my AFib almost never happens and when it does, it happens for maybe 30 seconds a few times a year. It's not thundering in my chest and it goes way quickly.

Michael Mooney of CA 5:31PM November 19, 2010

no reason to simply give up on fish oil. There are a lot of documented benefits, check them out at www.diet-myths.com

kate of IL 4:45PM November 16, 2010

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