Cardiovascular Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
FIsh for a Sustainable Healthy Diet In Scottish Households Study
Consumption of fish can help to prevent cardiovascular disease. The precise way in which
fish is beneficial is not fully understood. This is important to find out as fish consists
of a complex mixture of fatty acids and micronutrients such as vitamin D and selenium that
could individually, or collectively, be responsible for the beneficial effects.
Fish farming in Scotland is playing an increasingly important role in the provision of fish
for human consumption. But issues with sustainability of raw materials are requiring fish
farming to reformulate fish diets, which may affect the levels of beneficial omega-3 fatty
acids and other components in fish.
In this study we will be comparing the long-term health effects of eating two portions a
week of Scottish salmon raised on a traditional fish diet versus eating two portions a week
of Scottish salmon raised on a more sustainable fish diet. In addition, we will be looking
at differences in health outcomes when eating two portions a week of either Scottish salmon,
compared with eating no fish at all.
Aquaculture has the potential to take the pressure off wild fish stocks whilst meeting the
dietary needs of the population for omega 3 fatty acids and other key nutrients such as
vitamin D. The industry is working hard to improve sustainability - between 1995 and 2006 it
has been estimated that the input to output ratios for salmon improved from 7.5 to 4.9 and
trout from 6.0 to 3.4- but there is a need to do more. Reductions in fish stocks and catch
quotas, in addition to sustainability considerations, mean that farmed fish may have to be
raised on vegetable oils for example but this may reduce the omega 3 content and may affect
the content of other nutrients. Fish are an important component of the diet and there is a
need to understand the effect of pressures from sustainability on methods of production and
the health giving properties of fish. We have now been commissioned by the Scottish
Government's Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services Division (RESAS) to do
research on the health effects of Scottish farmed fish fed different feeding regimes in the
Scottish population, and assess how differential effects in measured health outcomes could
be related to fish composition.
Consumption of fish or omega-3- fatty acids from fish reduces coronary heart disease
mortality, the leading cause of death in developed nations. The precise way in which fish
provides benefit is not fully understood. This is important as fish and fish oils consist of
a complex mixture of fatty acids and micronutrients that could individually, or
collectively, be responsible for the beneficial effects. Aquaculture in Scotland is playing
an increasingly important role in the provision of fish for human consumption, but issues
with sustainability are requiring aquaculture to replace traditional fish oil and meal in
formulated fish diets by oil from more sustainable sources, which may affect the levels of
beneficial omega-3 fatty acids (EPA and DHA) and other components in fish. We will
investigate the health effects of consuming two portions oily fish (Scottish farmed salmon)
per week (current UK recommendation) using fish raised on different feeding regimes.
HYPOTHESIS
The health effects of consuming two portions oily fish (Scottish farmed salmon) per week
(current UK recommendation) will be different for fish raised on different feeding regimes,
primarily in terms of improving the omega-3 index.
OBJECTIVE
The main objective of this proposed study is to determine 1) whether the health benefits of
consuming two portions of Scottish farmed salmon per week that have been fed a diet high in
fish oil and fish meal significantly outweigh the health benefits of consuming two portions
of Scottish farmed salmon per week that have been fed a diet with more sustainable levels of
fish meal and fish oil, and 2) whether the difference in health benefits could justify the
use of less sustainable dietary regimes for farmed fish.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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