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Friday, February 9, 2018

Essential Fatty Acids: What's the Deal? â€
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Replacing dietary saturated fats with polyunsaturated fats is controversial, and it is unclear whether the dietary ratio of omega-3 fatty acids and omega-6 fatty acids is important for human health.


Video Ratio of fatty acids in different foods



Ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fats in the diets of hunter-gatherers

It has been claimed that among hunter-gatherer populations, omega-3 fats and omega-6 fats are typically consumed in roughly a 1:1 ratio. At one extreme of the spectrum of hunter-gatherer diets, the Greenland Inuit, prior to the late Twentieth Century, consumed a diet in which omega-6s and omega-3s were consumed in a 1:2 ratio, thanks to a diet rich in cold-water fish (which are a rich source of omega-3s) and completely devoid of omega-6-rich seed oils.


Maps Ratio of fatty acids in different foods



Optimal ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fats

To date, "no one knows what the optimal ratio in the diet is for these two families of fats." Susan Allport writes that the current ratio in Japan is associated with a very low incidence of heart and other diseases. A dietary ratio of 4:1 produces almost a 1:1 ratio of highly unsaturated fatty acids (HUFAs) in cell membranes."

Andrew Stoll, who advocates the consumption of the two fats in a 1:1 ratio, states, "Once in the body, omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids follow parallel pathways, continually competing with each other for chemical conversion to various structures and molecules inside and outside the cells. Given this mechanism, it makes sense that the two fats might be required in approximately equal amounts."

Both Stoll and Allport assert that present-day diets in the developed world have departed dramatically from this ratio. It has been estimated that in developed countries, the ratio of Omega-6s to Omega-3s is closer to 15:1 Another estimate is that "[t]he diet consumed by the typical American tends to contain 14 - 25 times more omega-6 fatty acids than omega-3 fatty acids."


Fatty acids â€
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Fish


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Nuts and seeds


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Oils


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Grains and beans




Green, leafy vegetables




Root vegetables




Pumpkins and squashes




Meat




See also

  • Monounsaturated fat
  • For listings of particular classes of polyunsaturated fatty acids, see:
    • Polyunsaturated fatty acid
    • Polyunsaturated fat
    • Omega-3 fatty acid
    • Omega-6 fatty acid
    • Omega-9 fatty acid
    • Conjugated linoleic acid
  • Essential fatty acid - for biochemistry of most polyunsaturated fats
  • Essential fatty acid interactions - for the interactions between ?-6 and ?-3 fatty acids
  • Unsaturated fat



Notes




References

Source of article : Wikipedia