Tissue Recovery |
Where Recommendations are Based on Scientific Evidence |
|---|
Cardiovasc Drugs Ther. 1997 Jul;11(3):485-91.
Randomized,
double-blind,
placebo-controlled
trial of
fish oil
and mustard
oil in
patients
with suspected
acute myocardial
infarction:
the Indian
experiment
of infarct
survival--4.
Singh
RB, Niaz MA, Sharma JP, Kumar R, Rastogi V, Moshiri M.
Heart Research Laboratory, Medical Hospital and Research Centre, Civil Lines,
Moradabad, India.
In a randomized, placebo-controlled trial, the effects of treatment with
fish oil (eicosapentaenoic acid, 1.08 g/day) and mustard oil (alpha-linolenic
acid, 2.9 g/day) were compared for 1 year in the management of 122 patients
(fish oil, group A), 120 patients (mustard oil, group B), and 118 patients
(placebo, group C) with suspected acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Treatments
were administered about (mean) 18 hours after the symptoms of AMI in all
three groups. The extent of cardiac disease, rise in cardiac enzymes, and
lipid peroxides were comparable among the groups at entry into the study.
After 1 year total cardiac events were significantly less in the fish oil
and mustard oil groups compared with the placebo group (24.5% and 28% vs.
34.7%, p < 0.01). Nonfatal
infarctions were also significantly less in the fish oil and mustard oil groups
compared with the placebo group (13.0% and 15.0% vs. 25.4%, p < 0.05). Total
cardiac deaths showed no significant reduction in the mustard oil group; however,
the fish oil group had significantly less cardiac deaths compared with the
placebo group (11.4% vs. 22.0%, p < 0.05). Apart from the decrease in the
cardiac event rate, the fish oil and mustard oil groups also showed a significant
reduction in total cardiac arrhythmias, left ventricular enlargement, and angina
pectoris compared with the placebo group. Reductions in blood lipoproteins
in the two intervention groups were modest and do not appear to be the cause
of the benefit in the two groups. Diene conjugates showed a significant reduction
in the fish oil and mustard oil groups, indicating that a part of the benefit
may be caused by the reduction in oxidative stress. The findings of this study
suggest that fish oil and mustard oil, possibly due to the presence of n-3
fatty acids, may provide rapid protective effects in patients with AMI. However,
a large study is necessary to confirm this suggestion.
PMID: 9310278 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
