logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/23/2024 10:27:00 AM     
Tilapia Contains Potentially Dangerous Fatty Acid Combination; 'Exaggerated Inflammatory Response' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 7/10/2008

Farm-raised tilapia, one of the most highly consumed fish in America, has very low levels of beneficial omega-3 fatty acids and, perhaps worse, very high levels of omega-6 fatty acids, according to new research from Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

The researchers say the combination could be a potentially dangerous food source for some patients with heart disease, arthritis, asthma and other allergic and auto-immune diseases that are particularly vulnerable to an “exaggerated inflammatory response.” Inflammation is known to cause damage to blood vessels, the heart, lung and joint tissues, skin, and the digestive tract.
 

“In the United States, tilapia has shown the biggest gains in popularity among seafood, and this trend is expected to continue as consumption is projected to increase from 1.5 million tons in 2003 to 2.5 million tons by 2010,” write the Wake Forest researchers in an article published this month in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

They say their research revealed that farm-raised tilapia, as well as farmed catfish, “have several fatty acid characteristics that would generally be considered by the scientific community as detrimental.” Tilapia has higher levels of potentially detrimental long-chain omega-6 fatty acids than 80-percent-lean hamburger, doughnuts and even pork bacon, the article says.

“For individuals who are eating fish as a method to control inflammatory diseases such as heart disease, it is clear from these numbers that tilapia is not a good choice,” the article says. “All other nutritional content aside, the inflammatory potential of hamburger and pork bacon is lower than the average serving of farmed tilapia.”

 
Tilapia Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
901Вести с водоемов Беларусиohotniki2024-01-06BY
902Five Companies Agree to Pay $7.2 Million for Polluting Two Ohio CreeksAssociated Press2024-01-08US
903Dynamic Kenyan duo secure game-changing investmentsthefishsite2024-01-08KE
904Kootenay Rockies named best ice-fishing spot in Canadae-know2024-01-06CA
905Frisch: Keep moving for ice fishing successechopress2024-01-05US
906Swimming together lets fish move faster while expending less energynewscientist2023-12-18US
907Researchers continue to find elusive lake sturgeon in the Grand RiverMichigan Radio2023-12-18US
908Giant goldfish swimming in Lake Erie and likely a pond near youcincinnati2023-12-16CA
909Anglers warned over rogue fishing licence website1news2023-12-22NZ
910See any cold stunned fish in NC? This agency wants you to report itcbs172023-12-21US
911Perus ports allow entry of Chinese ships tied to illegal fishing and forced labormongabay2023-12-22CN
912Five to ditch and five to try: what fish should we be eating in 2024theguardian2023-12-31UK
913Corps refilling Willamette River reservoirs after drawdowns meant to help migrating fishoregoncapitalchronicle2023-12-22US
914A look at some of the new Utah fishing records set in 2023einnews2024-01-05US
915Новости от рыболовов Нижней Волгиohotniki2024-01-05RU
916Endangered Species List Grows by 2,000Associated Press2023-12-11US
917GeoSalmo reels in €13.4 million investmentthefishsite2024-01-04CA
918New Zealand fisherman survives 23 hours in ocean after falling overboardFox News2024-01-05NZ
919Angler hopes 27-pound smallmouth buffalo fish shatters Texas recordFox News2024-01-05US
920Zaps from electric eels modify the genes of nearby fishboingboing2023-12-18US
921I Speak for the Fish: ‘Twas the night before Fishmasgreatlakesnow2023-12-18US
922We can't survive if we dont fish, say Gazan fishermenThe National News2023-12-19PS
923environmentalists push for partial moratorium on Chesapeake menhaden catchbayjournal2023-12-19US
924Filipino fishermen caught in debt net in South China Sea rowThomson Reuters Foundation2023-12-20PH
925Why genetically modified fish are being bred to fight rare childhood diseasestelegraph2023-12-20UK

214 215 216 36 of [217 - pages.]