NEW YORK - Diet and nutrition may play a key role in helping people fight
depression, Australian researchers report.
 Fishermen weigh fish in the western coast of Lake Maracaibo
town of Barranquita, about 150km (93miles) south of Maracaibo City in
Venezuela May 25, 2006. Diet and nutrition may play a key role in helping
people fight depression, Australian researchers report. [Reuters]
 |
A number of nutrients, including
polyunsaturated fatty acids, St. John's Wort and several B vitamins, have the
potential to influence mood by increasing the absorption of chemical messengers
in the brain, Dr. Dianne Volker of the University of Sydney in Chippendale and
Jade Ng of Goodman Fielder Commercian in North Ryde, New South Wales note in the
journal Nutrition and Dietetics.
There is a wealth of epidemiological, experimental and circumstantial
evidence to suggest that fish and the oils they contain, in particular omega-3
polyunsaturated fatty acid, are protective against depression, Volker and Ng
write. They point out that the balance between omega-3 and omega-6 may also be
important, given that the latter can prevent the body from absorbing the former.
Another candidate for dietary prevention of depression is the amino acid
tryptophan, which is found in foods, including turkey, and is responsible for
the drowsiness people feel after eating a hearty Thanksgiving dinner. The body
converts tryptophan to the neurotransmitter serotonin, suggesting the amino acid
may have modest effects on mood.
But studies investigating whether the B vitamin folate, vitamins B6 and B12,
and S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe) play a role in depression have had conflicting
results, the researchers write.
And while European studies have found that St. John's Wort has antidepressant
effects, US clinical trials have shown the opposite, which some think may be due
to the herb's interaction with other medications.
Volker and Ng conclude: "The role of balanced nutrition
in mental health should be recognized," thus allowing for the use of nutrition
and relevant nutrients in the maintenance of good mental
health.