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New Study Finds Ahiflower Oil Equivalent to Marine DHA for Tissue DHA Requirements

Data published in BBA – Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids indicated that brain DHA synthesis and turnover rates in mice fed Ahiflower oil were not statistically different than in mice fed a purified marine DHA-only oil, consumed at realistic human-equivalent intakes that were matched for total polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) content.

“This is the first study to assess synthesis/turnover of DHA from Ahiflower oil, a plant-based source of n-3 PUFA with a unique fatty acid composition high in SDA, which is also the product of the putative rate-limiting enzyme in the n-3 PUFA biosynthesis pathway, Δ6-desaturase,” wrote researchers from University of Toronto and Natures Crops International.

“Our findings indicate that Ahiflower oil may be a useful plant-based dietary source for maintaining DHA turnover comparably to dietary DHA,” they added.

Ahiflower oil

Oil from Ahiflower (Buglossoides arvensis) reportedly offers the highest levels of non-GM omega-3 essential fatty acids among commercially available dietary plant oils, combining ALA (alpha linolenic acid) and high levels of SDA (stearidonic acid). It also offers GLA (gamma linolenic acid), an omega-6 essential fatty acid, and oleic acid, an omega-9 fatty acid, to complement the overall healthy profile of this plant oil.

It has long been accepted that there is low conversion of ALA, the predominant omega-3 in plant sources such as flax, chia, and hemp, into EPA, one of the two (along with DHA) omega-3 fatty acids for which most of the research on health benefits has been done. Most experts peg this conversion at as low as 3% to as much as 20% for vegetarians. The proportion of ALA converted to DHA is small.

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Written by The Muscle Mag

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