Conclusions and recommendations from the symposium, Heart Healthy Omega-3s for Food: Stearidonic Acid (SDA) as a Sustainable Choice
Conclusions and recommendations from the symposium, Heart Healthy Omega-3s for Food: Stearidonic Acid (SDA) as a Sustainable Choice
Faculty who had presented at the symposium “Heart Healthy Omega-3s (n-3 fatty acids) for Food: Stearidonic Acid (SDA) as a Sustainable Choice” met and agreed upon conclusions and recommendations that could be made on the basis of evidence provided at the symposium. The participants also submitted manuscripts relating to their topics and these are presented in this supplement. These manuscripts were reviewed and also contributed to the conclusions and recommendations presented herein. The three major objectives of the symposium were to: 1) increase understanding of the current and emerging knowledge regarding the health benefits of (n-3) fatty acids (FA) including a focus on stearidonic acid (SDA) and EPA; 2) evaluate the importance of increasing (n-3) FA consumption in the US and the current challenge of doing so via mainstream foods; and 3) consider the health and food application benefits of SDA as a precursor to EPA and a plant-based sustainable source of highly unsaturated (n-3) FA for mainstream foods. Specific areas for future research were defined and included in the summary and conclusions herein. Overall evidence-based conclusions included: the current evidence provides a strong rationale for increasing (n-3) FA intakes in the US and other populations; current consumption of (n-3) FA in most populations is either insufficient or not efficient at providing adequate tissue levels of the long-chain (n-3) FA EPA and DHA; SDA in soybean oil appears to be a cost-effective and sustainable plant-based source that could contribute to reaching recommended levels of (n-3) FA intake, but more research and surveillance is needed; and adding SDA-enriched soybean oil to foods should be considered as a natural fortification approach to improving (n-3) FA status in the US and other populations. References for these conclusions and recommendations can be found in the articles included in the supplement
641S-643S
Deckelbaum, Richard J.
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Harris, William S.
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Akoh, Casimar C.
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Maki, Kevin C.
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Whelan, Jay
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Banz, William J.
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Kennedy, Eilenn
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Calder, Philip C.
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March 2012
Deckelbaum, Richard J.
83edf3a6-b081-47b0-8993-25a19f91b110
Calder, Philip C.
1797e54f-378e-4dcb-80a4-3e30018f07a6
Harris, William S.
a536d707-02f3-4b45-908e-28aeaaec596b
Akoh, Casimar C.
c01729d5-918c-418a-8f53-673fb1699df0
Maki, Kevin C.
86d1594f-4607-4687-99db-096a78592477
Whelan, Jay
5428c7bd-a569-4a35-adc5-bb48e432ac5f
Banz, William J.
a0e4ea04-1eff-4fc7-92f8-b350f3af878f
Kennedy, Eilenn
48ddadac-064a-4ad5-bb34-a215f9a787e5
Deckelbaum, Richard J., Harris, William S., Akoh, Casimar C., Maki, Kevin C., Whelan, Jay, Banz, William J. and Kennedy, Eilenn
,
Calder, Philip C.
(ed.)
(2012)
Conclusions and recommendations from the symposium, Heart Healthy Omega-3s for Food: Stearidonic Acid (SDA) as a Sustainable Choice.
Journal of Nutrition, 142 (3), .
(doi:10.3945/?jn.111.149831).
(PMID:22323767)
Abstract
Faculty who had presented at the symposium “Heart Healthy Omega-3s (n-3 fatty acids) for Food: Stearidonic Acid (SDA) as a Sustainable Choice” met and agreed upon conclusions and recommendations that could be made on the basis of evidence provided at the symposium. The participants also submitted manuscripts relating to their topics and these are presented in this supplement. These manuscripts were reviewed and also contributed to the conclusions and recommendations presented herein. The three major objectives of the symposium were to: 1) increase understanding of the current and emerging knowledge regarding the health benefits of (n-3) fatty acids (FA) including a focus on stearidonic acid (SDA) and EPA; 2) evaluate the importance of increasing (n-3) FA consumption in the US and the current challenge of doing so via mainstream foods; and 3) consider the health and food application benefits of SDA as a precursor to EPA and a plant-based sustainable source of highly unsaturated (n-3) FA for mainstream foods. Specific areas for future research were defined and included in the summary and conclusions herein. Overall evidence-based conclusions included: the current evidence provides a strong rationale for increasing (n-3) FA intakes in the US and other populations; current consumption of (n-3) FA in most populations is either insufficient or not efficient at providing adequate tissue levels of the long-chain (n-3) FA EPA and DHA; SDA in soybean oil appears to be a cost-effective and sustainable plant-based source that could contribute to reaching recommended levels of (n-3) FA intake, but more research and surveillance is needed; and adding SDA-enriched soybean oil to foods should be considered as a natural fortification approach to improving (n-3) FA status in the US and other populations. References for these conclusions and recommendations can be found in the articles included in the supplement
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Published date: March 2012
Organisations:
Human Development & Health
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Local EPrints ID: 337169
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/337169
ISSN: 0022-3166
PURE UUID: 364df62a-a635-49c2-9049-6c74b6a627aa
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Date deposited: 20 Apr 2012 08:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:50
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Author:
Richard J. Deckelbaum
Author:
William S. Harris
Author:
Casimar C. Akoh
Author:
Kevin C. Maki
Author:
Jay Whelan
Author:
William J. Banz
Author:
Eilenn Kennedy
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