Litcius/Paper detail

Low Omega-3 intake is associated with high rates of depression and preterm birth on the country level

Timothy H. Ciesielski, Scott M. Williams

2020Scientific Reports24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Low circulating levels of long chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC omega-3 PUFA) have been linked to major depressive disorder (MDD) and preterm birth (PTB), and prenatal depression associates with PTB. We therefore hypothesized that low Omega-3 intake would associate with higher MDD and PTB rates on the country-level. To test this hypothesis, we obtained country-level estimates for omega-3 intake, MDD prevalence, PTB rate, and per capita income for 184 countries in 2010. We then estimated the LC omega-3 PUFA levels that these intakes produce by accounting for direct consumption and the endogenous conversion of ingested plant-based precursors. Penalized splines indicated that MDD and PTB rates decreased linearly with increasing LC omega-3 PUFA, up to ~ 1000 mg/day for MDD and up to ~ 550 mg/day for PTB. Adjusted linear regression models below these thresholds revealed that a one standard deviation increase in LC omega-3 PUFA (380 mg/day) was associated with an MDD decrease of 5 cases/1000 people and a PTB decrease of 15 cases/1000 livebirths. In light of the extensive prior evidence on the individual-level, these findings indicate that low intake of LC omega-3 PUFA and its precursors may be elevating MDD and PTB rates in 85% of the countries studied.

Topics & Concepts

Major depressive disorderOmegaPolyunsaturated fatty acidDepression (economics)MedicineInternal medicineDemographyPer capitaEndocrinologyBiologyPopulationFatty acidEnvironmental healthPhysicsEconomicsBiochemistryMacroeconomicsSociologyQuantum mechanicsAmygdalaBirth, Development, and HealthFatty Acid Research and HealthChild Nutrition and Water Access
Low Omega-3 intake is associated with high rates of depression and preterm birth on the country level | Litcius