| Literature DB >> 31590264 |
Bonny Burns-Whitmore1, Erik Froyen2, Celine Heskey3, Temetra Parker4, Gregorio San Pablo5.
Abstract
Good sources of the long-chain n-3 fatty acids, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) include cold-water fish and seafood; however, vegan diets (VGNs) do not include animal-origin foods. Typically, US omnivores obtain enough dietary EPA and DHA, but unless VGNs consume algal n-3 supplements, they rely on endogenous production of long-chain fatty acids. VGN diets have several possible concerns: (1) VGNs have high intakes of linoleic acid (LA) as compared to omnivore/non-vegetarian diets. (2) High intakes of LA competitively interfere with the endogenous conversion of alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) to EPA and DHA. (3) High somatic levels of LA/low ALA indicate a decreased ALA conversion to EPA and DHA. (4) Some, not all VGNs meet the Dietary Reference Intake Adequate Intake (DRI-AI) for dietary ALA and (5) VGN diets are high in fiber, which possibly interferes with fat absorption. Consequently, health professionals and Registered Dietitians/Registered Dietitian Nutritionists working with VGNs need specific essential fatty acid diet guidelines. The purpose of this review was: (1) to suggest that VGNs have a DRI-AI Special Consideration requirement for ALA and LA based on VGN dietary and biochemical indicators of status and (2) to provide suggestions to ensure that VGNs receive adequate intakes of LA and ALA.Entities:
Keywords: ALA; DHA; EPA; LA; alpha-linolenic acid; linoleic acid; n-3 fatty acid; n-6 fatty acid; vegans
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31590264 PMCID: PMC6835948 DOI: 10.3390/nu11102365
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Energy, protein, total lipid, 18:2 n-6, 18:3 n-3, carbohydrate, and fiber contents of oils and foods commonly consumed by vegans and vegetarians for the essential fatty acids.
| Nutrient 1 | Energy | Protein | Total Lipid | 18:2n-6 | 18:3n-3 | CHO | Total Fiber | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unit | Kcal | g | g | g | g | g | g | |
| Oils | ||||||||
| Oil, Canola | 100 g | 884 | 0 | 100 | 18.64 | 9.137 | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, Flaxseed/Linseed (Panos) | 100 g | 884 | 0.110 | 99.98 | 14.25 | 53.37 | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, Soybean | 100 g | 763 | 0 | 100 | 50.42 | 6.789 | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, Walnut | 100 g | 884 | 0 | 100 | 52.90 | 10.40 | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, High Oleic Sunflower | 100 g | 884 | 0 | 100 | 3.61 * | 0.192 ** | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, High Oleic Safflower | 100 g | 884 | 0 | 100 | 12.72 | 0.096 | 0 | 0 |
| Oil, Culinary Algae | 100 g | 800 | 0 | 93.33 | n/a | n/a | 0 | 0 |
| Ovega-3 supplement 2 | 1 gel | n/a | 0 | n/a | n/a | 0.5 | 0 | 0 |
| Deva Vegan supplement 3 | 1 cap | 5 | 0 | 0.5 | n/a | 0.2 | 0 | 0 |
| Nordic Naturals supplement 4 | 2 gels | 10.0 | 0 | 1.00 | n/a | 0.715 | 0 | 0 |
| Food Sources | ||||||||
| Almonds Raw | 100 g | 579 | 21.15 | 49.93 | 12.30 | 0.003 | 21.55 | 12.50 |
| Amaranth | 100 g | 371 | 13.65 | 7.020 | 2.736 | 0.042 | 65.25 | 6.70 |
| Avocados, Raw, California | 100 g | 167 | 1.960 | 15.41 | 1.674 | 0.111 | 8.640 | 6.80 |
| Black Walnuts Dried | 100 g | 619 | 24.06 | 59.33 | 33.80 | 2.680 | 9.580 | 6.80 |
| Brazil Nuts, Dried | 100 g | 659 | 14.32 | 67.10 | 23.859 | 0.018 | 11.74 | 7.50 |
| Brown Rice Cooked | 100 g | 123 | 2.740 | 0.970 | 0.355 | 0.011 | 25.58 | 1.60 |
| Bulgur Cooked | 100 g | 83 | 3.08 | 0.240 | 0.094 | 0.004 | 18.58 | 4.50 |
| Cashews Raw | 100 g | 553 | 18.22 | 43.85 | 7.782 | 0.062 | 30.19 | 3.30 |
| Chia Seeds Dried | 100 g | 486 | 16.54 | 30.74 | 5.840 | 17.80 | 42.12 | 34.4 |
| English Walnuts Dried | 100 g | 654 | 15.23 | 65.21 | 38.09 | 9.08 | 13.71 | 6.70 |
| Flaxseed Raw | 100 g | 534 | 18.29 | 42.16 | 5.903 | 22.81 | 28.88 | 27.3 |
| Hempseed Hulled | 100 g | 553 | 31.56 | 48.75 | 1.340 | 8.864 | 8.670 | 4.00 |
| Millet Cooked | 100 g | 119 | 3.510 | 1.000 | 0.480 | 0.028 | 23.67 | 1.300 |
| Oat Bran Cooked | 100 g | 40 | 3.210 | 0.860 | 0.324 | 0.015 | 11.44 | 2.60 |
| Pistachio Raw | 100 g | 560 | 20.16 | 45.32 | 13.10 | 0.210 | 27.17 | 10.60 |
| Poppy Seeds | 100 g | 525 | 17.99 | 41.56 | 28.30 | 0.273 | 28.13 | 19.50 |
| Quinoa | 100 g | 368 | 14.12 | 6.070 | 2.977 | 0.260 | 64.16 | 7.00 |
| Rye | 100 g | 338 | 10.34 | 1.630 | 0.659 | 0.108 | 75.86 | 15.1 |
| Sesame Seeds dried | 100 g | 573 | 17.73 | 49.67 | 21.375 | 0.376 | 23.45 | 11.8 |
| Soybeans Raw | 100 g | 446 | 36.49 | 19.94 | 9.925 | 1.330 | 30.16 | 9.30 |
| Soybeans, Boiled | 100 g | 141 | 12.35 | 6.400 | 2.657 | 0.354 | 11.05 | 4.20 |
| Sunflower Seeds | 100 g | 584 | 20.78 | 51.50 | 23.05 * | 0.06 ** | 20.00 | 8.60 |
1 Source: US Department of Agriculture Nutrient Data Base, 2019 [18]. * undifferentiated 18:2, ** undifferentiated 18:3. 2 Ovega-3 i-Health, Inc., 2017 [19]. 3 Deva Nutrition LLC, 2017 [20]. 4 Nordic Naturals Inc., 2017 [21].
Figure 1The elongation and desaturation of the essential fatty acids, linoleic acid (LA) and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA). AA: arachidonic acid; EPA: eicosapentaenoic acid; DHA: docosahexaenoic acid; PUFA: polyunsaturated fatty acids. Permission by authors and Elsevier [29].
Concentrations of n-6 fatty acids in various tissues by following a vegan or non-vegan diet (as cited in text).
| Author, Year | Plasma | Serum | Erythrocyte and Whole Blood | Platelets | Breastmilk | Adipose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosell et al., 2005 [ | Higher concentrations of LA in VGN plasma fatty acids than in meat-eaters, but found no significant differences in AA. | - | - | - | - | - |
| Li et al., 1999 [ | Higher concentrations of LA in VGN plasma fatty acids than in meat-eaters, but found no significant differences in AA. | - | - | VGNs had higher levels of LA in platelets, but lower levels of AA than the high meat-eaters. | - | - |
| Mann et al., 2006 [ | Higher concentrations of LA in VGN plasma fatty acids than in meat-eaters, but found no significant differences in AA. | - | - | - | - | - |
| Pinto et al., 2017 [ | No significant differences between plasma LA or AA in VGNs or omnivores. | - | No difference for LA or AA in blood fatty acid profiles of VGNs and meat eaters. | - | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1978 [ | Higher LA and AA plasma choline phospholipids in VGNs compared to omnivores. | - | Higher levels of LA in VGNs than omnivores, but no significant differences for AA in erythrocytes. LA was higher in breastfed VGN infant erythrocytes compared to omnivore breast-fed infants, and AA was not significantly different. | - | - | Higher levels of LA in VGN adipose tissue compared to omnivore adipose tissue. |
| Elorinne et al., 2016 [ | - | Higher LA, but no significant differences of AA in VGN serum compared to non-VGN serum. | - | - | - | - |
| Agren et al., 1995 [ | - | Higher LA, but no significant differences of AA in VGN serum compared to non-VGN serum. | Higher levels of LA in VGNs than omnivores, and higher AA in omnivores. | Higher levels of LA in VGN platelets, but no differences of AA compared to omnivores. | - | - |
| Sarter et al., 2015 [ | - | - | No difference for LA or AA in blood fatty acid profiles of VGNs and soldiers. | - | - | - |
| Kornsteiner et al., 2008 [ | - | - | Higher levels of LA in VGNs than omnivores, and higher AA in omnivores. | - | - | - |
| Fisher et al., 1986 [ | - | - | - | Higher platelet LA concentration, and lower AA in both the VGN and vegetarian subgroups as compared to omnivores. | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1992 [ | - | - | - | - | Higher levels of LA in VGN breastmilk compared to omnivores, but there were no significant differences for AA. | - |
| Perrin et al., 2018 [ | - | - | - | - | No significant differences for LA or AA in VGNs as compared to omnivores. LA:ALA ratio was significantly lower in VGNs than omnivores. | - |
| Miles et al., 2019 [ | - | - | - | - | - | LA was higher in VGNs than non-vegetarians. AA was significantly lower in VGNs than non-vegetarians. |
Concentrations of n-3 fatty acids in various tissues by following a vegan or non-vegan diet (as cited in text).
| Author, Year | Plasma | Serum | Erythrocyte and Whole Blood | Platelets | Breastmilk | Adipose |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosell et al., 2005 [ | Plasma ALA was not different between male VGNs and meat-eaters, whereas EPA and DHA were significantly lower in male VGNs than in meat-eaters. | - | - | - | - | - |
| Mann et al., 2006 [ | ALA plasma was higher in male VGNs than the high meat group, whereas EPA and DHA were significantly lower in VGNs. | - | - | - | - | - |
| Agren et al., 1995 [ | Lower levels of DHA and EPA in VGNs compared to omnivores. | Lower levels of DHA and EPA in VGN serum compared to omnivores. | DHA and EPA were lower in VGN erythrocytes compared to omnivores. | Low levels of DHA and EPA in VGN platelets compared to omnivores. | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1978 [ | EPA and DHA were significantly lower compared to omnivores. | - | Low EPA and DHA in VGNs and VGN breast-fed infant erythrocytes compared to omnivores. | - | Higher ALA levels in VGNs than omnivores, and lower DHA and EPA (not significant). | ALA was higher in adipose tissue of VGNs than omnivores (not significant). |
| Li et al., 1999 [ | EPA and DHA were lower in male VGNs, and the n-3:n-6 ratio was lower, and AA:EPA was higher compared to male high meat eaters. | - | - | No differences in ALA composition between VGNs and omnivores; however, there was a significant decrease in EPA and DHA levels in VGNs. | - | - |
| Pinto et al., 2017 [ | ALA was higher in VGNs than the high meat group; however, EPA and DHA were significantly lower in VGNs. | - | The omega-3 index was significantly lower in VGNs (2.71%) than in omnivores (5.42%). | - | - | - |
| Welch et al., 2010 [ | ALA levels were not different for males or females as compared to the meat-eaters, but VGN DHA was higher in women than meat-eaters. In VGN males, plasma DHA was lower than omnivores. | - | - | - | - | - |
| Elorinne et al., 2016 [ | - | No differences between VGNs and non-VGN serum ALA concentrations, however EPA and DHA serum concentrations were significantly lower in VGNs than omnivores. | - | - | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1992 [ | - | - | The proportion of DHA in erythrocytes of breast-fed VGN infants was 1.9% as compared to infants fed a milk formula (3.7%). | - | Levels of ALA were comparable to vegetarians, but concentrations of DHA were less than 50% for both vegetarians and omnivores. | - |
| Kornsteiner et al., 2008 [ | - | - | DHA and EPA in adult erythrocytes were decreased in Austrian VGNs. | - | - | - |
| Sarter et al., 2015 [ | - | - | Higher ALA and EPA levels in VGNs. No differences in DHA levels between VGNs and US soldiers in whole blood FA. | - | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1992 [ | - | - | - | No difference in ALA composition between VGNs and non-VGNs; however, there was a sig. decrease in EPA and DHA levels in VGNs. | - | - |
| Perrin et al., 2018 [ | - | - | - | ALA was significantly higher in VGNs than in non-VGNs; DHA and EPA were not sig. different. The LA:ALA ratio was lower in VGNs than non-VGNs. | - | - |
| Miles et al., 2019 [ | - | - | - | - | - | ALA was higher and EPA, DPA, and DHA were sig. lower in VGNs than non-VGNs. Total n-3 was highest in VGNs due to high ALA levels. |
Recommendations by researchers and reviewers for adult vegans/total vegetarians (VGNs) (most recent studies first).
| Author, Year | Recommendation: | 18:2n-6 LA | 18:3 n-3 ALA | 20:5 n-3 EPA | 22:6 n-3 DHA | n-6:n-3 or Omega-3 Index |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agnoli et al., 2017 [ | Females | Limit intake of sources of n-6 FA, & TFA. Limit consumption of processed, deep-fried foods, and alcohol. | - | Pregnant/breastfeeding or women with increased requirement for long chain n-3 fatty acids, should be advised to consume an algae-based supplement of known nutrient content. | Pregnant/breastfeeding or women with increased requirement for long chain n-3 fatty acids, should be advised to consume an algae-based supplement of known nutrient content. | - |
| Combined-Males and Females | - | Improve n-3 nutritional status by regular consumption of good sources of alpha-linolenic acid. | - | - | - | |
| Burdge et al., 2017 [ | Females | - | - | - | Need more cognitive studies for children of vegetarian females due to low DHA levels. | - |
| Pinto et al., 2017 [ | Combined | - | Further research whether populations with low n-3 status are more at risk of having a pro-inflammatory profile. | - | - | - |
| Melina et al., 2016 [ | Females | - | - | - | Low dose microalgae DHA supplements for pregnancy and lactation. | - |
| Combined | High intakes of LA may suppress ALA conversion. | May be prudent to ensure higher intakes of ALA. N-3 needs of healthy individuals can be met with ALA alone; endogenous synthesis of EPA and DHA from ALA is sufficient. | Clinical relevance of reduced EPA and DHA status in VGNs are unknown. Low-dose micro-algae based DHA supplements are available for those with increased needs. | Clinical relevance of reduced EPA and DHA status in VGNs are unknown. Low-dose micro-algae based DHA supplements are available for those with increased needs. | A ratio of LA/ALA not exceeding 4:1 has been suggested for optimal conversion. | |
| Harris, 2014 [ | Combined | Consume more ALA and less LA to increase the Omega-3 Index. | Consume more ALA and less LA to increase the Omega-3 Index. | - | - | Omega-3 Index >8%. |
| Sarter et al., 2014 [ | Combined | - | - | VGNs respond | VGNs respond | No direct evidence that omega-3 index confers additional health benefits over and above their already protective VGN diet. |
| Saunders et al., 2013 [ | Combined | - | Double current AI of ALA if no direct sources of EPA and DHA are consumed. Increased needs or reduced conversion may benefit from DHA and EPA supplements derived from microalgae of 200–300 mg/day of DHA and EPA (pregnant and lactating women) and reduced conversion ability. | - | - | - |
| Craig, 2010; Review [ | Combined | - | Regular consumption of plant foods naturally rich in n-3 fatty acid ALA, such as ground flaxseed, walnuts, soy products, and hemp seed beverages. | - | Pregnant and lactating women may benefit from DHA-fortified foods and microalgae-derived DHA supplements. | - |
| Welch et al., 2010 [ | Combined | - | Further research for conversion of ALA to long chain n-3 PUFAs for maintenance of adequate status in non-fish and fish-oil consumers is required. | - | - | - |
| Simopoulos, 2008 [ | Combined | - | - | - | - | Ratio of 4:1 is associated with 70% decrease in total mortality in secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease. |
| Kornsteiner et al., 2008 [ | Combined | - | Erythrocyte phospholipid n-3 status of VGNs is critical. It is important to maintain n-3 fatty acid intake during adult life. | - | - | Ensure physical, mental and neurological health, reduce n-6/n-3 ratio with an additional intake of direct sources of EPA and DHA, regardless of age and gender. |
| Mann et al., 2006 and Li et al., 1999 (Mann used data collected from Li, 1999) [ | Combined | - | Advised to increase intake of n-3 fatty acids to increase platelet PL n-3 PUFA and reduce platelet aggregability. | - | - | - |
| Rosell et al., 2005 [ | Combined | - | Suggests (with caution) VGNs increase intake of ALA and limit intake of LA to optimize FA status. The importance of long chain fatty acids in the diet needs further investigation. | - | - | - |
| Davis et al., 2003 [ | Combined | 5.5–8% Kcals from n-6 FA. Reduce high n-6 oils in the diet, decrease processed foods. Primary fat should be MUFA. | <1.5–2% of calories should be obtained from n-3. Decrease EtOH and trans fatty acids to increase conversion of ALA to EPA and DHA. Double intake of ALA; provide >1% of energy from n-3 or about 1.1 g/1000 calories. Increased needs require 2.2 g/1000 calories. Aim for 2–4 g of ALA/day. | Not essential, but it is important to ensure sufficient levels by relying on conversion from parent fatty acids. Two important steps to improve EPA status: 1) Maximize conversion of ALA to EPA and DHA and 2) Provide a direct source of EPA and DHA. | Not technically essential, but ensure sufficient levels by relying on conversion from parent fatty acids. Supplements of DHA should be 100–300 mg/day. DHA and ALA should also be adequate. | To achieve the 4:1 ratio, <1.5–2% of calories should be obtained from n-3 and 5.5–8% of calories from n-6 FA. |
| Simopoulos, 2000 [ | Combined | - | - | - | - | Ratio was 1:1 to 2:1 in ancient diets. Present ratio is 10 to 1:20 to 25 to 1- indicates a deficiency in Western Diets of n-3. |
| Fokkema et al., 2000 [ | Combined | - | - | - | - | Found a 3:1 ratio increased EPA from 0.3 to about 1.0% in VGN plasma. A 3.7 g/day ALA diet for 4 weeks (ratio of 3.8:1) augmented ALA about 1% more. Total n-3 levels increased from 2.3 to 3.4% in plasma. DHA status was not increased. |
| Agren et al., 1995 [ | Combined | Depressed levels of n-3 FA are depressed due to very low diet levels and high LA and oleic acid intake. | - | - | - | - |
| Sanders et al., 1978 [ | Females | - | More research is needed on low delta 4 desaturase in lactating women. | - | - | - |
| Combined | - | Further research needed to establish whether differences in the proportion of n-3 derivatives in tissues are of physiological importance. | - | - | - |