|
Eating fish has no effect on abnormal heart rhythm
Reported March 02, 2010
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - There are
plenty of good reasons to eat fish, but preventing abnormal heart rhythms
doesn't seem to be one of them, according to a new study.
Dr. Jarrett D. Berry of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School
in Dallas and his colleagues found no relationship between how much
non-fried fish postmenopausal women ate and their risk of developing atrial
fibrillation, the most common heart rhythm abnormality.
About a quarter of people will develop atrial fibrillation in their
lifetimes, Berry and his team note in the American Journal of Cardiology.
The condition occurs when the heart's two upper chambers, or atria, quiver
rather than contracting rhythmically. This causes blood to pool in the atria
rather than being pumped through the body efficiently, increasing the risk
of blood clots and strokes.
There is evidence that omega-3 fatty acids, in fish or as supplements, could
help reduce atrial fibrillation risk, Berry and his team write, but other
studies have found no relationship.
To investigate, they looked at 44,720
participants in the Women's Health Initiative study, postmenopausal women 50
to 79 years old. During follow-up, which lasted around six years, 378 women,
or less than 1 percent of the study participants, developed atrial
fibrillation.
Fewer than 5 percent of the women ate five or more servings of fish a week;
average fish consumption was 1.5 servings weekly. But the researchers found
no relationship between how much fish women ate, or how much omega-3 fatty
acid they consumed, and their atrial fibrillation risk.
Berry and his team conclude that their findings offer "no evidence" that
omega-3 fatty acid or fish consumption affects the risk that a healthy
postmenopausal woman will develop atrial fibrillation.
SOURCE: American Journal of Cardiology, online February 8, 2010. |