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Health News and ResearchFish Oil Reduces Asthma in Athletes
Athletes
who experience shortness of breath and other asthma-like
symptoms after exercise may benefit from
fish oil capsules,
researchers report in the November 2003 issue of the American
Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
In a small study, elite athletes who normally experienced
asthma-like symptoms after exercising had less severe symptoms
after adding fish oil capsules to their diet.
"If you
experience asthma-like symptoms after exercise, such as
breathlessness and a tight chest, then taking fish oil
supplements that contain omega-3 fatty acids may help you
breathe better during and after exercise," said Dr. Timothy D.
Mickleborough of Indiana University in Bloomington.
For many
people with asthma, exercise can trigger wheezing, chest
tightness, cough and breathlessness, but these symptoms may also
occur in people who do not have asthma.
In fact, research suggests that elite athletes are more likely
to experience asthma-like symptoms after exercise than less
accomplished athletes and the general population. Why this is
the case is uncertain, but prolonged exercise may increase
exposure to allergens and substances that can irritate the
airways as well as increase inhalation of cold, dry air.
Because
substances called omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)
that are found in fish oils can produce anti-inflammatory
effects, there has been interest in seeing whether PUFAs may
improve asthma symptoms.
So far,
the evidence on the effect of PUFAs in people with asthma is
mixed and the one study that looked at the effect of fish oil
supplements on asthma did not show any benefits.
Now, in a study that tested the effect of fish oil supplements
in athletes with exercise-induced asthma-like symptoms,
Mickleborough and his colleagues report that fish oils seem to
reduce the severity of symptoms.
The study
included 20 elite athletes, half of whom experienced asthma-like
symptoms after exercise but who did not have asthma. For three
weeks, participants were randomly assigned to take fish oil
capsules or placebo capsules that contained olive oil. After a
two-week washout period, volunteers switched groups.
Before exercise, there were no significant differences in lung
function between the fish oil and placebo groups,
But the
decline in lung function that normally occurred after exercise
was reduced by almost 80 percent in athletes on the fish oil
diet. These athletes also needed less asthma medication when
taking fish oil supplements.
Fish oil supplements did not seem to affect lung function at all
in athletes who did not usually experience symptoms after
exercise.
The authors of a related editorial caution that the study was
small and does not mean that fish oil supplements will help
people with asthma.
Reference:American
Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, November 15,
2003.
Key concepts: Fish oil, omega-3 fatty acids, PUFA, asthma, athletes |
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