Jme. Bourre et al., COMPARISON OF VEGETABLE AND FISH-OIL IN THE PROVISION OF N-3 POLYUNSATURATED FATTY-ACIDS FOR NERVOUS-TISSUE AND SELECTED ORGANS, Journal of nutritional biochemistry, 8(8), 1997, pp. 472-478
Rats were fed (ns were their mothers from 2 weeks before mating) with
a semi-synthetic diet deficient in alpha-linolenic acid (peanut oil-ba
sed) but containing linoleic acid At age 5 weeks, the animals were div
ided into several groups that were fed for 3 weeks varying amounts of
(n-3) series polyunsaturated fatty acids, either as alpha-linolenic ac
id (by addition of rapeseed oil to the peanut oil) or as very long cha
in acids (by addition of fish oil). Compared with vegetable oil, equal
quantities of fish oil gave a higher concentration of docosahexaenoic
acid (DHA) in all the tissues. About two-fold more vegetable oil than
fish oil was needed to obtain the same quantity of DHA in all the tis
sues. Three weeks of the new diet were not enough to stabilize DHA con
centrations in rat nervous tissue, but recovery was more rapid with fi
sh oil than with vegetable oil. For non-nervous tissue, increases in D
HA levels were lower with vegetable oil than with the same amount of f
ish oil, and fish oil provided more very long chain (n-3). (C) Elsevie
r Science Inc. 1997.