We’ve been told for years to eat more omega-3s and less omega-6s to lower cholesterol and improve heart health.
But now a new study in the journal Communications Biology has found two huge flaws in the previous research.
They put the theory about the omega-3 vs omega-6 ratio to a test—and the results were quite surprising.
You’ll find omega-3 fats in all fish, especially mackerel, salmon, sardines, lake trout, herring, anchovy, and tuna; and in plant sources such as flaxseed, chia seed, hemp oil, walnut, fresh basil, and dried oregano.
Most of the omega-6 fats we eat can be found in soybean oil, corn oil, grape seed oil, poppy seed oil, safflower oil, and sunflower oil. We fry in them and they’re added to almost all the packaged, canned, and partially pre-prepared products we buy too.
Our bodies can’t make enough to keep us healthy, so we need to get our supplies from food.
Lots of studies have claimed that the ratio between them is important: higher omega-6 and lower omega-3 is bad for us, they say. But the authors of the new study spotted two huge flaws in these studies:
The first is people. We’re usually quite bad at remembering what we eat and drink.
The second is that we don’t always know how much of these oils is really in the foods we eat, because it can vary a lot.
There’s also a third, smaller flaw, which is that some health conditions can affect how much of these two fats the body absorbs.
The researchers wanted to study how Omega 3s and 6s affected health without having to worry about these questions, so they manipulated the genes of mice in different ways. They bred some that produced different amounts of omega-3 and omega-6 regardless of what they ate, and they also used a sample of normal mice for comparison.
The results? The mice that overproduced omega-6 compared with omega-3 had higher rates of cancer and metabolic disease. Metabolic disease includes not only diabetes but also high blood pressure and cholesterol.
Their livers were unhealthier, and they had a lot more of the gut bacteria that cause chronic inflammation. Chronic inflammation is a huge contributor to cholesterol, diabetes, and heart disease.
The mice who could convert omega-6 to omega-3 did not suffer from these health problems.
The unhealthy mice had the same omega-6 to omega-3 ratio found in the typical 21st century Western diet, which means it’s probably to blame for much of the heart disease epidemic.
So, somewhat surprisingly, the researchers confirmed that despite the flaws in their studies, the advice from previous research was correct.
Which means:
1. Avoid vegetable oils and foods made with them.
a. Eat the omega-3 sources listed above.
2. Eat plenty of fruit and vegetables as most of them contain more omega-3 than omega-6.
This approach will bring down your omega-6-omega-3 ratio and you’ll have a much healthier heart.
And if your blood pressure is too high, discover how three easy exercises drop blood pressure below 120/80 in as little as nine minutes.