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Washington: Omega-3 fatty acids found in certain oily fish, including salmon, could prove more useful in preventing sudden death from heart problems.
Thomas Kottke and other researchers at Regions Hospital's Heart Center at St Paul, Minneapolis, created a computer model to check possible sudden deaths in a fictional group of people aged 30-84.
The researchers tested several scenarios. In one, people ate adequate amounts of omega-3 fatty acids from fish or fish oil supplements, reported the online edition of health magazine WebMD.
In another scenario, automated external defibrillators (AEDs) were used to shock the heart back into action if it developed a fatal rhythm problem that can result in sudden death.
In a third scenario, people who needed implant-able defibrillators because of heart failure got those devices.
Heart failure also greatly increases the chance of sudden death and all three scenarios lowered sudden death risk.
However, omega-3 fatty acids yielded the best results, even in healthy people. The study will appear in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine's October edition.
Sudden death risk dropped 6.4 per cent with adequate omega-3 fatty acid intake, compared with 3.3 per cent for implant-able defibrillators, and less than one per cent with easy access to AEDS, the study shows.
About three quarters of the imaginary lives saved in the omega-3 group were healthy people, said Kottke.
"Choosing fishes two or three times a week is a good idea," Kottke was quoted as saying. "Grilled, baked, or broiled but not fried," he added.
"Fried fish appears to lose all of its benefits,” Kottke further said.
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