Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Study finds taking fish oil, vitamin D won’t help patients prevent a-fib

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For people hoping to prevent the heart rhythm disorder known as “a-fib,” new research shows that taking vitamin D or fish oil supplement­s won’t help.

A-fib, also known as atrial fibrillati­on, affects more than 33 million people worldwide and is the most common type of abnormal heart rhythm. It can cause symptoms that affect a person’s quality of life, result in blood clots that can cause a stroke, and also lead to heart failure.

For the study, researcher­s examined whether taking vitamin D supplement­s or omega-3 fatty acids found in fish oil might affect different kinds of a-fib, and whether some patients would be more likely to benefit or be harmed by the supplement­s.

Overall, the results were mostly consistent across the different types of a-fib and patient groups, according to lead author Dr. Christine Albert, chair of the cardiology department at Smidt Heart Institute in Los Angeles, and her colleagues.

The study was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

“Our recommenda­tion remains the same,” she said in a release. “We do not support taking fish oil or vitamin D supplement­s to prevent atrial fibrillati­on.”

However, “unlike other recent trials that found increased risks of atrial fibrillati­on with higherdose omega-3 fatty acid supplement­s, our study did not find a significan­tly increased risk of atrial fibrillati­on with one gram of fish oil per day, which is good news for individual­s taking low-dose fish oil for other health conditions,” Albert said.

Her team also found that vitamin D supplement­s at 2,000 internatio­nal units per day did not increase a-fib risk.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Research finds taking fish oil won’t raise a-fib risk.
DREAMSTIME Research finds taking fish oil won’t raise a-fib risk.

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