Chicago - Eating fish just once a month is enough to reduce the risk of stroke
in men, according to a study of more than 43,000 health professionals.
While numerous studies have touted the cardiovascular benefits of eating fish
several times a week, the new research found a similar benefit from just
occasional meals of seafood.
Men who ate about 3 to 5 ounces of fish one to three times a month were 43
percent less likely to have a stroke during 12 years of follow-up. Men who ate
fish more often did not reduce their risk any further, suggesting that a small
amount works just as well as a larger one, said co-author Dr. Ka He of
Harvard's School of Public Health and colleagues.
Their findings appear in yesterday's Journal of the American Medical
Association.
A study in JAMA last year found that women who ate about 4 ounces of fish two
to four times a week cut their stroke risk by 48 percent. The study found
lower risk reductions in women who ate fish once a week or less.
Whether the new results would apply to women was unknown because none were
studied.
The American Heart Association's dietary recommendations include two servings
of fish a week.
The researchers in the Harvard study said the reasons for their findings were
unclear.
Omega-3 fatty acids, found in most fish, have been shown to lower levels of
blood fats linked to cardiovascular disease and to help keep blood from
clotting.
The study found risk reductions for only ischemic, or clot-related, strokes,
the most common kind. The researchers noted that native Alaskans eat a lot of
fish and have a high incidence of hemorrhagic, or bleeding, strokes.
That has raised concerns that while the anti-clotting effects of fish can
decrease the risk of clot-related strokes, they may have the opposite effect
on bleeding strokes.
The Harvard study found no significant link between fish consumption and
bleeding strokes, but only 106 of the 608 strokes that occurred were the
bleeding type. The researchers said more study is needed.
The study was funded by the
National Institutes of
Health.