Fatty marine fish (omega-3)
From the Greenland Inuit to cardiovascular RCTs — EPA + DHA, the best-documented dietary omega-3 source.
In 1 minute
What does it provide? Long-chain omega-3 fatty acids (EPA, DHA), high-quality protein, vitamin D, selenium, iodine — in concentrated form in fish oil.
How much? 2 servings per week (≈ 250–500 g/week), at least 1 of which is fatty fish. The EFSA reference is 250 mg EPA + DHA/day.
When to avoid? Fish allergy, predisposing gout (high purine), anticoagulant therapy with high-dose fish oil supplementation, large predator fish (shark, swordfish) during pregnancy (mercury).
Consumption of fatty marine fish reaches back to the late Paleolithic: archaeological evidence shows people were regularly fishing open-ocean prey off the coasts of East Timor as far back as 40,000 years ago, and Baltic Sea communities were eating salted and smoked herring already in the Neolithic. Ancient Greeks and Romans made the famous fermented fish sauce garum from mackerel, sardine, and tuna — Pliny and Apicius describe it in detail. Fish oil as a medical agent was first recommended by Manchester physician Thomas Percival at the end of the 18th century for rheumatic complaints; cod-liver oil quickly spread as an anti-rickets remedy and became a pillar of 19th–20th-century pediatrics.
The modern omega-3 story began in the 1970s when Danish researchers Hans Olaf Bang and Jørn Dyerberg observed in their studies of the Greenland Inuit that with high fatty-fish consumption, heart attack was extremely rare. This launched the great wave of EPA/DHA research, which culminated in the 2000s in the REDUCE-IT, STRENGTH, and VITAL RCTs. Today, fatty marine fish are the best-bioavailable dietary sources of EPA and DHA — the ALA → EPA/DHA conversion from plant sources has only ≤ 8% efficiency. (Wikipedia, PubMed)
🔬 Scientific Background
Long-chain omega-3 (EPA 20:5 n-3, DHA 22:6 n-3) are specific components of fish oil. Human conversion of plant α-linolenic acid (ALA) to EPA is ≤ 8%, to DHA ≤ 4% — therefore fish and marine sources are biologically privileged. EFSA, PMC
Clinical evidence crystallized in the large RCTs of the past two decades. REDUCE-IT (Bhatt 2019, NEJM): 4 g/day icosapent ethyl in high-triglyceride, high-cardiovascular-risk patients delivered a 25% relative risk reduction for the MACE endpoint. VITAL (Manson 2019, NEJM): 1 g/day omega-3 over 5.3 years did not reduce the primary composite CV endpoint, but showed significant benefit in subgroups (low fish consumers, Black Americans). STRENGTH (Nicholls 2020, JAMA): omega-3 carboxylic-acid formulation showed no benefit vs. placebo. PubMed
At the microbiome level, EPA/DHA intake results in a bifidogenic-type shift, reduced endotoxemia, and a more favorable SCFA profile (Watson 2018, Gut). The specific lipid mediators in fish (resolvins, protectins, maresins) help with the active "resolution" of inflammation — distinct from anti-inflammatory action. Cell Metabolism
- + Olive oil + green salad + tomato: classic Mediterranean matrix — antioxidants protect omega-3 from oxidation.
- + Lemon/lime + parsley: vitamin C and apigenin for polyphenol synergy.
- + Vitamin D-rich meal (mushroom, egg): shared fat-soluble absorption.
- + Whole-grain side dishes (brown rice, quinoa, buckwheat): fiber-rich, synbiotic microbiome effect.
- + Polyphenol sources (dark chocolate, berries): antioxidant protection against omega-3 PUFA oxidation.
- + Fresh, refrigerated fish: maximum EPA/DHA preservation; freezing is also good, but long storage reduces omega-3.
- Anticoagulant therapy (warfarin, DOACs, aspirin) with high-dose fish oil supplements: additive bleeding risk — dietary fish in moderation is fine, supplements under medical supervision.
- High-temperature long oil frying (≥ 200 °C, 10+ minutes): PUFA oxidation — gentle steaming/grilling is recommended.
- Concurrent large amounts of refined omega-6 oil (corn, sunflower): conflicts with the anti-inflammatory matrix.
- Heavily cured/salted fish with sodium restriction: anchovies, garum, marinated herring forms have high Na content.
- Citrus juice in excessive amounts with prolonged contact: acid denaturation on fish protein — though the "ceviche" method exploits this for flavor, omega-3 can partly oxidize.
- Fish allergy (IgE-mediated): absolute contraindication — parvalbumin is the main allergen; frequent cross-reactivity with other fish.
- Gout (acute attack): sardine, herring, anchovy are high in purines — avoid during a flare.
- Pregnancy (large predator fish): shark, swordfish, marlin, giant tuna are to be AVOIDED due to high mercury content. Sardine, herring, anchovy, small salmon are safe and beneficial DHA sources.
- Infant/toddler feeding: tiny bone risk — puréed, boneless.
- Chronic kidney disease, late stage: protein and phosphorus restriction requires medical supervision.
- Histamine intolerance: scombroid poisoning risk from spoiled tuna, mackerel — fresh fish mandatory.
- Immunocompromised: avoid raw fish (sushi, sashimi) due to Listeria, Anisakis.
Daily/weekly serving
2 servings per week (250–500 g/week), at least 1 fatty fish. The EFSA reference is 250 mg EPA + DHA daily.
Preparation pattern
- Fresh or quick-frozen fatty fish (salmon, mackerel, sardine, herring).
- Gentle heat: steaming 8–10 minutes, grilling 4–6 minutes/side, or 180 °C oven 12–15 minutes.
- Finish: olive oil, lemon juice, fresh herbs (dill, parsley, thyme).
Classic patterns
Mediterranean sardine: grilled with olive oil + lemon + parsley + tomato.
Norwegian salmon: baked with dill and lemon, with steamed vegetables.
Dutch matjes herring: traditional, with onion and pickle — high EPA, easy preparation.
Canned sardines (with bones): instant calcium bomb + omega-3, on salad or whole-grain bread.
Japanese saba mackerel: grilled mackerel with rice and miso soup.
Storage
Fresh: refrigerated 1–2 days, frozen 3 months (omega-3 gradually decreases). Canned: 2 years before opening, refrigerated 3–4 days after. Marinated/smoked: refrigerated 5–7 days.
What not to do
Don't over-fry at high heat in oil (PUFA oxidation). Don't consume raw in at-risk groups (pregnancy, immunocompromised — Anisakis, Listeria). Don't replace whole fish with fish oil capsules.
References
[1] Bang HO, Dyerberg J. Plasma lipid and lipoprotein pattern in Greenlandic West-Coast Eskimos. Lancet 1971;1(7710):1143–1145.
[2] Bhatt DL et al. Cardiovascular Risk Reduction with Icosapent Ethyl for Hypertriglyceridemia (REDUCE-IT). NEJM 2019;380(1):11–22.
[3] Manson JE et al. Marine n-3 Fatty Acids and Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease and Cancer (VITAL). NEJM 2019;380(1):23–32.
[4] Nicholls SJ et al. Effect of High-Dose Omega-3 Fatty Acids vs Corn Oil on Major Adverse Cardiovascular Events (STRENGTH). JAMA 2020;324(22):2268–2280.
[5] EFSA NDA Panel. Scientific Opinion on Dietary Reference Values for fats, including saturated fatty acids, polyunsaturated fatty acids, monounsaturated fatty acids, trans fatty acids, and cholesterol. EFSA Journal 2010;8(3):1461.
[6] Watson H et al. A randomised trial of the effect of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid supplements on the human intestinal microbiota. Gut 2018;67(11):1974–1983.
[7] Serhan CN. Pro-resolving lipid mediators are leads for resolution physiology. Cell Metab 2014;19(1):21–36.
[8] FDA. Advice About Eating Fish: Guidance on mercury content and safe consumption (updated 2021).
[9] MSC (Marine Stewardship Council). Certified sustainable seafood guidelines.
