Updated
Updated · Okdiario · Jul 3
DHA Trial Shows 2,000 mg Fish Oil Fails to Slow Memory Loss Over 2 Years
Updated
Updated · Okdiario · Jul 3

DHA Trial Shows 2,000 mg Fish Oil Fails to Slow Memory Loss Over 2 Years

3 articles · Updated · Okdiario · Jul 3

Summary

  • A 365-person double-blind trial found daily 2,000 mg DHA did not improve memory, thinking or brain shrinkage over two years in adults 55 to 80 at elevated Alzheimer’s risk.
  • A 17% rise in cerebrospinal-fluid DHA after six months showed the omega-3 reached the brain, but scans and cognitive tests still showed no meaningful benefit versus placebo.
  • About 47% of participants carried the APOE4 Alzheimer’s-risk variant, and lead investigator Hussein Naji Yassine said the results do not support fish oil supplements as a preventive measure against Alzheimer’s.
  • The findings challenge a market where Americans spend more than $1 billion a year on fish oil, while reinforcing advice to favor fatty fish and broader lifestyle measures over a single supplement.
  • Researchers and public-health guidance still point to diet, exercise, smoking avoidance, social activity and control of blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes as the more credible path to lowering dementia risk.

Insights

Fish oil fails to prevent dementia. What are the proven alternatives for brain health?
Fish oil reaches the brain but fails to protect it. Why is the 'magic bullet' theory for dementia dead?
A high-risk Alzheimer's gene affects 1 in 4 people. What are the next-gen therapies beyond supplements?