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View Full Version : Farmed tilapia may be no better for you than a doughnut



MuSuLPhReAk
09-08-2008, 12:09 AM
CARLY WEEKS

From Globe and Mail
August 6, 2008 at 9:00 AM EDT

Fish has become a go-to staple for Canadians who want to have a healthy diet. So it may come as a surprise to learn that eating farmed tilapia, a widely consumed fish that has been steadily growing in popularity, may be no better than dining on bacon, hamburgers or doughnuts.

New U.S. research has found that farmed tilapia have low levels of omega-3 fatty acids - and surprisingly high levels of potentially detrimental omega-6 fatty acids.

It is a finding that could have serious implications for people who suffer from arthritis, asthma and other illnesses or allergies because the omega-6 fatty acids may cause inflammation, which can damage blood vessels and vital organ tissue, according to the findings, published in last month's Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

Omega-6 fatty acids are considered to be essential and must be obtained through diet because they can't be produced by the body.

But consuming too much omega-6 can contribute to cancer, asthma, depression and heart disease, among other ailments.

Excessive consumption of omega-6 is common in many Western diets, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center.

By contrast, omega-3 fatty acids are considered good for health because they help to lower the levels of LDL (low-density lipoprotein), also known as "bad" cholesterol, in the blood.

Tilapia, a lean white fish with a mild taste, is the second-most cultivated fish in the world, after carp, according to Fisheries and Oceans Canada. While China is the world's leading producer of tilapia, British Columbia and Nova Scotia also produce it on a commercial scale. The department said Toronto is North America's largest market for live tilapia, and the World Aquaculture Society predicts that production will rise steadily because of increased demand for the fish.

"Ten years ago, people wouldn't even know what the word [tilapia] meant," said Robert Ackman, professor emeritus in food science and technology at Dalhousie University, who studied fats and oils in fish. "It's on the tabletops here in Nova Scotia for heaven's sakes. It's a popular food that's been written up in food magazines. People come in and ask for it."

Canadians are often encouraged to increase their consumption of fish to take advantage of beneficial omega-3 fatty acids. But certain varieties of fish, and how they are raised, can make a major difference in its health benefits, according to the study.

"For individuals who are eating fish as a method to control inflammatory diseases such as heart disease, it is clear from these numbers that tilapia is not a good choice," according to the study, conducted by researchers from the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina.

The study singled out tilapia raised on fish farms as having high levels of the potentially dangerous omega-6 fatty acids. Although researchers didn't compare farmed tilapia with wild tilapia, they noted significant discrepancies between farmed tilapia and other types of farmed fish.

For instance, they found that farmed tilapia contained less than half a gram of omega-3 fatty acids per 100 grams, while farmed salmon and trout had nearly three and four grams per 100 grams, respectively. At the same time, farmed tilapia contained significantly larger amounts of omega-6 acids - higher than the levels found in doughnuts, pork bacon and hamburgers made with 80-per-cent lean ground beef.

One of the major reasons for the abundance of omega-6 is the fact the tilapia involved in the study were raised on farms, Prof. Ackman said.

"This is a serious problem because they tend to feed [the fish] vegetable oils for growth and that's not quite what the tilapia is accustomed to getting in its native state," he said.

Because the abundance of studies in recent years has made it difficult for consumers to decipher which types of fish may provide health benefits and how much they should be eating, Prof. Ackman said the best rule of thumb is to avoid farmed fish.

"Generally speaking, wild fish is always the best bet," he said.

Even though wild fish has been associated with increased levels of mercury, he said, the amounts aren't great enough to cause serious issues in most people.

O-Train
09-08-2008, 01:33 AM
The last paragraph is of particular importance I think. You can get away with eating a can of farmed tuna/day but eating a can of wild tuna/day could potentially cause some serious health risks.

I'd say comparing farmed fish to a doughnut is a bit of a stretch to say the least.

Freebsd1977
09-08-2008, 01:42 AM
For crying out loud, enough with the scare tactics. Tilapia is a delicious fish and I eat it alot. It's low priced and very healthy for you. Funny how the higher priced fish and foods never get bad publicity.

BAM
09-08-2008, 12:06 PM
The greedy farms feed them vegetable oil to fatten them up so might as well just go drink a bottle of vegetable oil.

gustavo77
10-08-2008, 09:08 AM
Tilapia taste muddy to me anyway, hate that shit...bring on the Walleye!!!

5151
10-08-2008, 12:24 PM
The greedy farms feed them vegetable oil to fatten them up so might as well just go drink a bottle of vegetable oil.

and all of the meat at your grocery store lives off almost an entirely corn diet. So **** steak and bring on the corn cob. Evaluation of micronutriton is a great practice but we can't lose sight of macronutrition either. Saying that tilapia is the same as eating a doughnut because of the type of the fat is like saying we should remove all types of nuts from our diets as well, just like Trans-Resveratrol is the sole explanation for the french paradox right?:ji

BAM
10-08-2008, 12:55 PM
and all of the meat at your grocery store lives off almost an entirely corn diet. So **** steak and bring on the corn cob. Evaluation of micronutriton is a great practice but we can't lose sight of macronutrition either. Saying that tilapia is the same as eating a doughnut because of the type of the fat is like saying we should remove all types of nuts from our diets as well, just like Trans-Resveratrol is the sole explanation for the french paradox right?:ji

So clogged hearts are good as long as you get the benefit of macro-nutrients?

Freebsd1977
10-08-2008, 03:57 PM
Take every news report with a grain of salt. Remember the egg scare of the 80's? No more than 2 eggs a week MAX or you will die of a heartattack. Same thing. Geez I remember the posters and ad campaigns in elementary school in Montreal telling us to be careful of Haitians and gay people because they carry the HIV virus and I grew up in the Ahuntsic district. I'm serious here, anyone else remember those?

St
10-08-2008, 04:03 PM
I live Sole best with French Tartar sauce,now how do you say tartar sauce in French.

5151
10-08-2008, 07:42 PM
So clogged hearts are good as long as you get the benefit of macro-nutrients?

what I'm saying is the bigger picture cannot be over looked. Wild being better than farmed should not be a concept new to anyone. However saying that eating an animal is like eating its food is a gross oversimplification that ignores the basic fact that the digestive workings of any animal is much more complex than 1 calorie of fat translates to 1 calorie of body fat when eaten by the next in the food chain. Omega-6s are not going to clog your heart, the ratio of 3:6 is what is important here.

L3
11-08-2008, 01:14 PM
i ate 4 cans tuna/day for 2 weeks staright, felt like shit

Gettin'r'round
03-09-2008, 10:50 AM
Funny I just finished the book "The end of the line". It's basically about overfishing and how the upcoming decades there won't be any fish left.

Tilapa is a vegan fish so they were looked upon as a hope for aquaculture as they don't need to be fed fish to grow. To feed farmed salmon they hoover up the ocean to make fish food. It takes 5g of wild fish Omega 3 to make 1g of farmed Omega 3. Why not take the 5g and turn them into pills?

As for Omega 6, the Israelis have a diet high in O6 and low in O3. And you know what? They suffer from heart disease at the rate we have here in NA. Omega 6 when used in prostogaldin production are highly inflammatory. Thromboxane for example is benign when made with Omega 3 but not when made with Omega 6. Your body will use either 3 or 6, it doesn't care which. But YOU should care!