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Which form of Omega 3 is most Bioavailable?
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About the Author
John Romano is a well known and controversial writer and champion of the Libertarian cause. For 18 years he held the position of Senior Editor at Muscular Development magazine. He also contributed to Fitness Rx for Women magazine as well as Fitness RX for Men magazine. He also authored and co-authored several books in the bodybuilding and fitness field.
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Which form of Omega 3 is most Bioavailable?
by: John Romano
In my last article on Omega-3 fatty acids I identified the most common forms of Omega-3 fatty acids you are likely to encounter
in your food and your supplements. Those are: triglyceride, ethyl ester, phospholipid and free fatty acid. If you remember, the structure and breakdown of those various forms of essential fats are quite different, yielding the same Omega-3s, but very different when it comes to how efficiently the body can utilize them. Essentially, I’m talking about their bioavailability.
The term “bioavailability,” in this case, is important because it generally refers to the capability of the orally ingested Omega-3 fatty acids to be digested in the gastrointestinal tract and cross the intestinal wall, thereby entering the bloodstream and, subsequently, transported to the various body tissues and organs. The efficiency of this process, relevant to each form of fatty acid determines how much of the Omega-3s in the capsule you swallow ends up arriving at a target organ or body structure, i.e. joints, brain, eyes, heart, etc. Therefore, one of the most important aspects in considering Omega-3 DHA/EPA supplementation is bioavailability.
This is vital because if a certain brand of Omega-3 supplement is boasting “300mg of Omega-3s,” the trumpeting of such a concentration is a bit misleading if only a very small fraction of those Omega-3s actually survive digestion, break down, make it across the intestinal wall and are delivered to body tissues.
The question that now begs to be answered is, out of the available forms of Omega-3s – triglycerides, ethyl esters, phospholipids and free fatty acids – which form is the most bioavailable? Meaning, which form of fatty acids is going to deliver the highest concentration of DHA and EPA into the blood stream and to the various target tissues?
A recent study concluded a greater incorporation of EPA into circulating blood plasma (as triglyceride) when EPA (1g) was consumed as the triglyceride form relative to the ethyl ester form. In a German study, maximal plasma levels of DHA/EPA were also found to be significantly
lower
with ethyl ester forms as compared to triglyceride forms (as you can see from this chart, taken from the study, where the dashed line represents ethyl ester fish oil). A subsequent, major, long-term, well-designed Omega-3 bioavailability clinical trial (large number of subjects and lengthy durations) has been published demonstrating the bioavailability of DHA/EPA in triglyceride form was found to be significantly better than the ethyl ester form.
To quantify these data, a 1990 study found that absorption of Omega-3s in the form of free fatty acids was 50% greater than Omega-3 triglycerides, and triglycerides were absorbed 50% more efficiently than ethyl esters. In other words, free fatty acids are 100% more absorbable by the body than ethyl ester omega-3 fatty acids. There is little data on the bioavailability of phospholipids. The data that does exist suggests its bioavailability is similar to triglycerides.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of fish oils sold globally; including those sold in North America are EPA and DHA ethyl ester concentrates. A small percentage of fish oils on the market are natural triglycerides, phospholipids and/or free fatty acids.
According to these data, clearly, the ethyl ester group should be ruled out of your supplement buying choice. That leaves triglycerides, phospholipids and free fatty acids when you consider supplemental Omega-3s. What would be ultimately important then is the concentration of either free fatty acid, phospholipid and/or triglyceride Omega-3s in the supplement you consider.
Since the data suggests free fatty acids are more bioavailable than triglycerides, and phospholipids are similar to triglycerides, the Omega-3 supplement with the highest concentration of free fatty acids would deliver the most usable DHA and EPA. Assays show one particular extract, known commercially as PCSO-524 (do a google search), contains up to 22 times more free fatty acids than triglycerides found in some fish oil brands. Ethyl ester Omega-3s represent the bargain basement variety of fish oil supplements. You can buy a lot of them for not very much money, and the data demonstrates the Omega-3s they contain are the least bioavailable.
If your response to the foregoing is, “so what, I’ll just buy the cheaper brand and take more of it,” consider this: large doses of fish oil are contraindicated for people who bruise easily, are prone to bleeding or are taking blood thinning medications. Large doses of fish oil can also cause indigestion, diarrhea, and “fish burps.” Also, depending on the dosage, a large amount of fish oil can add needless fat calories to your diet. This could be a consideration if you are trying to lean out. Just six “double 0” size fish oil capsules contain about 120 calories. If you are trying to equal the free fatty acid potency of DHA and EPA with ethyl ester fish oil that is 100% less bioavailable than free fatty acid, then you need to take 100% more of it. Even if you can deal with the reported side effects of large doses of fish oil, to end up gaining body fat on top of it doesn’t seem like the best idea.
As the adage goes, "You get what you pay for."
References
Chart: Eur J Clin Nutr. 2011 Feb;65(2):247-54. Epub 2010 Nov 10. Enhanced increase of omega-3 index in response to long-term n-3 fatty acid supplementation from triacylglycerides versus ethyl esters.
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