Abstract

Background: Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) plus docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) supplementation has beneficial cardiovascular effects, but postprandial influences of these individual fatty acids are unclear.Objectives: The primary objective was to determine the vascular effects of EPA + DHA compared with DHA only during postprandial lipemia relative to control high–oleic acid meals; the secondary objective was to characterize the effects of linoleic acid–enriched high-fat meals relative to the control meal.Design: We conducted a randomized, controlled, double-blind crossover trial of 4 high-fat (75-g) meals containing 1) high–oleic acid sunflower oil (HOS; control), 2) HOS + fish oil (FO; 5 g EPA and DHA), 3) HOS + algal oil (AO; 5 g DHA), and 4) high–linoleic acid sunflower oil (HLS) in 16 healthy men (aged 35–70 y) with higher than optimal fasting triacylglycerol concentrations (mean ± SD triacylglycerol, 1.9 ± 0.5 mmol/L).Results: Elevations in triacylglycerol concentration relative to baseline were slightly reduced after FO and HLS compared with the HOS control (P < 0.05). The characteristic decrease from baseline in plasma nonesterified fatty acids after a mixed meal was inhibited after AO (Δ 0–3 h, P < 0.05). HLS increased the augmentation index compared with the other test meals (P < 0.05), although the digital volume pulse–reflection index was not significantly different. Plasma 8-isoprostane F2α analysis revealed opposing effects of FO (increased) and AO (reduced) compared with the control (P < 0.05). No differences in nitric oxide metabolites were observed.Conclusions: These data show differential postprandial 8-isoprostane F2α responses to high-fat meals containing EPA + DHA–rich fish oil compared with DHA-rich AO, but these differences were not associated with consistent effects on postprandial vascular function or lipemia. More detailed analyses of polyunsaturated fatty acid–derived lipid mediators are required to determine possible divergent functional effects of single meals rich in either DHA or EPA. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01618071.

Highlights

  • Long-chain (LC)5 n23 PUFAs—namely, EPA (20:5n23) and DHA (22:6n23)—are abundant in oily fish, the main dietary source of preformed EPA and DHA

  • This study investigated the effects of consuming high-fat meals of varying unsaturated fatty acid composition to test the hypothesis that meals enriched with LC n23 PUFAs—either fish oil (EPA and DHA) or algal oil (DHA only)—result in more favorable vascular and oxidative stress responses postprandially compared with a control high-MUFA meal

  • The postprandial response to a meal enriched with n26 PUFAs was not expected to differ from the response to the control highMUFA meal

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Summary

Introduction

Long-chain (LC)5 n23 PUFAs—namely, EPA (20:5n23) and DHA (22:6n23)—are abundant in oily fish, the main dietary source of preformed EPA and DHA. It was hypothesized that high-fat meals containing FO and AO would result in improved vascular and oxidative stress responses during postprandial lipemia, whereas the response to HLS would be unchanged relative to the control (HOS) in men.

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