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Your Brain Fat domain – how have you progressed?

Congratulations. You’ve finished a month focussing on improving your Brain Fats and have consequently upped your intake of omega-3, phospholipids and vitamin D.

To see how much reduction you’ve achieved in your Dementia Risk Index click the button below to complete only the ‘Brain Fats’ related questions. This will show you, specifically, what level of improvement you’ve made over these past 4 weeks, what effect that has on your ‘Brain Fats’ domain score, and your overall Dementia Risk Index.

You will then be asked to choose the next domain you’d like to focus on for the next 4 weeks. Note: if you got distracted and didn’t make many changes such that ‘Brain Fats’ is still in your top two weakest domains you can choose to focus on this again with more resolve.

Further info

Your brain on ketones – Is C8 oil your brain’s next best friend?

So far, you’ve focussed on upping your intake of essential brain fats – omega-3, phospholipids and vitamin D. But did you know that your brain can actually run on a type of fuel, ketones, made from fat?

Those billions of tightly packed together brain cells need instant fuel. They’ve got no room to burn more cumbersome fuel such as fatty acids, which muscles cells can do.

There are only two fuels a neuron can use: glucose (high octane sugar) or ketones. Ketones are made in the liver from fat. If you fast, for example, and run out of glucose, your liver will breakdown your body fat and make ketones.

Ketones are the brain’s best kept secret. Most animals can’t make them or use them. But all the smartest animals can – from dolphins to crows. Babies are born with ‘blubber’, and breastmilk is full of fat, both of which allow the baby’s body to make ketones which is needed to fuel the rapidly forming brain, making up to ONE MILLION CONNECTIONS A SECOND!

Watch the film: How Your Brain Makes Energy


https://vimeo.com/736984708

If you give a neuron those two fuels – glucose or ketones – they prefer to derive energy from ketones. Ketones are made from a type of fat called C8 oil. While coconut oil contains C8, only 7 percent of it is C8, so it’s a poor substitute.

Read the Report in your Library: Why C8 oil is the best brain fuel. You’ll see the results of an experiment that fed people with the early stages of cognitive decline two spoonful’s a day of C8 oil, and their brain energy came back to life.

If you feel your brain could do with a boost, adding a spoonful of C8 oil might make a difference. Start with one teaspoon twice a day, then gradually increase to a maximum of two dessertspoons. If you get any gastrointestinal side-effects, just lower the dose. The body takes a while to get used to this new fuel, from which the liver makes ketones.

An alternative approach, which you’ll explore in the LOW GL domain is switching to a ketogenic diet by greatly limiting carbs and increasing fat. But that’s another story.

Further info

Why omega-3 improves your and children’s mood and memory

How much of the ‘terrible 2s’ is actually down to a lack of omega-3? If a child is acting out, with bursts of anger and unable to concentrate, it’s entirely possible that they are lacking enough omega-3. Children are particularly vulnerable to dips in omega-3 supply because their brains are building so fast. If they eat no fish, no chia, flax or walnut and are not given omega-3 fish oil supplements, they’re going to be lacking. If you know a child with symptoms that sound like an attention deficit or hyperactivity, read this: https://foodforthebrain.org/adhd/.

Omega fish oil supplements are proven to help children with ADHD, but what about adults? Perhaps you find yourself occasionally over-emotional, illogical and stressed out beyond reason, given the circumstances. Could you be lacking omega-3? (We address stress and how to build stress resilience in the SLEEP AND CALM domain.)

A trial involving adults without attention or behaviour issues reported significant improvements in memory. Find out more. The trial  carried out in New Zealand at Massey University, gave 176 adults between the ages of 18 and 45 either an omega 3 fish oil supplement providing 1.16 grams of DHA or a placebo for six months. They selected non-smokers, who didn’t take fish oil supplements and consumed less than 200mg of DHA+EPA a week – in other words, didn’t eat fish often.

They measured various aspects of cognitive function including tests for memory and reaction time at the beginning and end of six months. Those of the omega 3 DHA supplements had a highly significant improvement in two tests for memory (episodic and working memory) and a significant, but small, improvement in reaction time.

What about mood and depression? The other critical omega-3 fat, EPA, has been tested as an anti-depressant in numerous trials. A ‘meta-analysis’ which is a study of all the trials, concludes: ‘the use of omega-3 fats is effective both in patients with major depressive disorder and milder depression’. For depression the greater the amount of EPA, not DHA, the more effective the treatment was. The most effective studies give 1,000mg of EPA with the lowest amount having an effect being 300mg combined EPA/DHA.

What does this mean for you? A large 100g serving of mackerel or salmon gives you 650mg of EPA. Most fish oil capsules providing 1,000mg of fish oil, provide something like 260mg EPA & 190mg DHA. Some supplements include a little omega-6 GLA, which as been shown to be effective for ADHD. Our suggestion is to aim for a combined intake of 500mg of EPA+DHA from supplements. Most vegan sources of DHA and not particularly rich in EPA, however the body can convert EPA into DHA and vice versa.

 

Further info

How much vitamin D is enough?

You get vitamin D from your food, supplements and the sun, the primary source being exposure to sunlight. Seafood provides the most dietary vitamin D. Vitamin D deficiency increases risk of Alzheimer’s disease. Supplements of vitamin D can be derived from animal or vegetable source (mushrooms and lichen). Supplementing 800iu (20mg) a day for 12 months has been shown to improve cognitive function and lessen amyloid protein markers.  Vitamin D used to be thought of as only necessary for healthy bones, but is now understood to influence over 200 critical genes, supporting healthy immunity and reducing risk of numerous diseases from cancer to heart disease as well as dementia.

The Reference Nutrient Intake, assumed to be the right amount for maintaining healthy bones, is set at 10mcg (400iu). The UK government recommends that everyone should be supplemented 10mcg during the winter but the Irish authorities tell everyone to supplement 25mg (1,000iu) all year round for immune support. But is this enough?

In truth the amount you ‘need’ depends entirely on what gets your blood level up to an optimal level. The table below shows you what you want to achieve:

Low 30 nmol/l 12 ng/ml or below
Medium 50-74 nmol/l 20 to 29.6 ng/ml
Optimal 75-125 nmol/l 30-49 ng/ml
High 125 nmol/l or above 50 ng/ml or above

Vitamin D is easy to test, either through your doctor or privately, including online home-test kits. In the UK this can be done via a NHS lab – https://www.vitamindtest.org.uk. It’s well worth knowing. Alternatively, If you’re not sure what yours is and want to find out, in the UK there’s an Essential Health Check home test kit you can buy from YorkTest which is extremely good value. It also tests your serum B12, folate, cholesterol triglycerides as well as your vitamin D levels.

A major review of all bone-related studies recommends achieving a blood level of at least 50 nmol/L with daily vitamin D supplemental doses of 10 to 20mcg (400 to 800iu).

According to a major review of hundreds of studies, a higher blood concentration of 75 nmol/L is required for maximum vitamin D related disease prevention, which would require a higher supplemental intake of at least 10mcg (400iu) up to 50μg (4,000iu) closer to the level given in this study.

The variability depends on one’s dietary intake and sun exposure – since vitamin D is made in the skin in the presence of sunlight. Dietary intake means eating oily fish, milk or vitamin D enriched mushrooms and eggs. A portion of salmon or mackerel gives about 10mcg compared to white fish, which is about 5mcg. A cup of milk gives 3mcg and an egg 1mcg. Some mushrooms that are grown indoors, and exposed to light, like us, can then make vitamin D. A portion of such mushrooms could provide over 5mcg. These mushrooms are often labelled ‘high Vitamin D’. That’s about the same as half an hour sunlight a day in the summer, exposing both arms and face. This only creates about 5 to 10mcg. Exposing twice as much skin would double this so bear this in mind when in the sun.

In the summer months we’d recommend a minimum daily supplement of 15mcg (600iu) daily. Generally, in the winter months for those unable to escape to the sun, we recommend supplementing 25mcg (1,000iu) daily.

For those not eating fish, such as vegans and vegetarians, or not exposing themselves to sunlight, it would appear that supplementing 25mcg (1000iu), more than double the UK’s Reference Nutrient Intake of 10mcg, is likely to be needed to keep blood levels in the healthy range. There is no danger with vitamin D overdose at even four times these levels. Many nutritional therapists take 75mcg (3,000iu) in the winter.

Vitamin D can be stored in the body, so you can opt to take seven times the daily dose once a week.

 

Further info

Why brain fats need antioxidants and alternatives to frying

In the last email we learnt that eating relatively more omega-3 rich foods and less omega-6 rich foods helps convert the plant form of omega-3 (ALA) into brain-building DHA.

As a fat moves ‘down the chain’ from ALA to DHA it becomes more and more ‘unsaturated’ with more ‘double bonds’. Think of these double bonds like flexible joints, allowing the fat to bend and fold in your highly flexible brain. It makes it more able to pass messages from one brain cell to the next. But, those ‘double bonds’ can also be attacked by oxidants – think smoking, fried foods and pollution. These damage the fat and render it useless because it becomes stiff.

© Patrick Holford & Piatkus

That’s how the original margarine was made –actually by ‘hydrogenating’ the double bonds, turning a cheap vegetable oil into something behaving like butter, a fully ‘saturated’ fat. If the double-bond is oxidised, it becomes a dangerous ‘trans’ fats. These are/were very high in junk processed food and are being phased out. But you’ll also make trans-fats by frying, especially deep-frying the food you eat.

So, there are two more positive steps you can take to protect your vital brain fats.

The first is to increase your intake of ANTIOXIDANTS which is explained in detail in that domain. Vitamin E, a fat protective antioxidant, is added to omega-3 fish oil supplements to protect the omega-3. Raw nuts and fish also provide vitamin E. You will learn that a good intake of vitamin E is associated with better cognition.

The second is to decrease your intake of and generation of OXIDANTS by the way you prepare foods.  Smoking and exposing yourself to pollution, be it traffic or jogging/walking by busy roads are other sources of oxidants.

In terms of best to worst cooking methods they go from raw > steamed > poached> boiled > steam fried > baked > sautéed > stir fried> fried > deep fried> barbecued.

The worst of all is burnt fat meat. E.g. anything that’s crispy. We know it’s delicious, but not nutritious.

Aim for half the vegetables you eat as either raw or steamed. If you boil a food, such as vegetables, eat them ‘al denté’ meaning still with a crunch. An example is frozen peas. As soon as they float to the surface, having added them to boiling water, they’re ready.

Stir frying is different to frying in that the ingredients are essentially steamed rather than fried. The lower temperature of steaming doesn’t destroy nutrients to anything like the same extent that frying does.

It is best to start with a shallow pan, or a deep frying pan, with a thick base and lid that seals well. For the purist, oil-free steam-fry add two tablespoons of liquid – either use water, vegetable stock or water down a fraction of the sauce you are going to cook with. Once this is almost boiling, add some vegetables, turn the heat up and put on the lid. The vegetables will sweat and start to cook.

After a minute or two, add the rest of the ingredients. Turn the heat down after a couple of minutes and steam in this way until cooked.

An alternative steam-fry involves starting off by adding a fraction of olive oil, just to lightly coat the saucepan. Again, it is best to use a largely saturated fat like butter or coconut oil, or olive oil which is principally monounsaturated (called oleic acid which has only one double bond so less room for oxidation). Warm the oil and add the ingredients. As soon as they are sizzling, after a couple of minutes, add two tablespoons of water or vegetable stock, or the source you are going to use and cook with the lid on. In this way vegetables can be ‘steam-fried’ using a fraction of the fat used in frying. The shorter you steam them for, the more taste the vegetables will have. What you steam with adds flavour. A favourite for steam-frying is to add third soya sauce, a third lemon juice, a third water – about 2 tablespoons in a pan-full of chopped up veg. If you use coconut butter to coat the pan, and add chunks of ginger and garlic, then you’ve got so much flavour you’ll never miss the crispy parts!

 

Further info

Omega 3/6 – getting the balance right counts

By now you’re well aware that getting enough omega-3 DHA into your brain is a vital part of brain health. As much as we love and encourage you to eat foods such as chia, walnut, flax, and cold climate greens, high in omega-3 ALA, the conversion to even EPA averages around 5% and even less to DHA.

Can this be improved? The answer is ‘yes’, by three means.

The first is to improve the ratio of omega-6 fats in your diet, which compete with omega-3 fats. In the diagram below you’ll see that omega-6 fats, which mainly come from a hotter climate which, from sources such as sunflower and sesame, should convert into their most powerful form, GLA, which is what you get in evening primrose oil or borage oil, often used in supplements. GLA is an anti-inflammatory and helps, for example, balance hormones. The final conversion is also blocked by ‘insulin resistance’, a consequence of too much junk food high in sugar and carbs. You’ll be dealing with this in the LOW GL domain.

© Patrick Holford & Piatkus

The enzymes that do all this conversion from ALA to DHA and linolenic acid (LA) to GLA depend on certain nutrients such as B vitamins, zinc, and magnesium. Having enough of these is a good start, but the real problem is that our modern day diet, on average, has something like six times more omega-6 than omega-3, while our ‘semi-aquatic’ ancestors and hunter gatherers that lived along the water’s edge, had more like 1:1 ratio of omega-3 to 6, and lots more from eating marine food.

That’s because we fry in sunflower oil, use omega-6 oils from sunflower, safflower, peanut and soya in processed foods and the meat we eat has usually been fed a grain-based diet, perhaps corn, again high in omega-6.

A lot of processed foods avoid these essential fats completely because they’ll reduce the shelf-life of a food as they become rancid. Good food goes off. Most people are lacking both undamaged, good quality omega-6 and omega-3 but are relatively more deficient in omega-3.

So, one way to get more DHA into your brain is to stop eating these kinds of foods. In the next email we’ll show you how to cook without sunflower/safflower oil – in salad dressings, for example.

Your homework for today and tomorrow is to become aware of all the food sources that contain omega-6, from the oils you fry in, to processed foods containing sunflower, safflower, peanut or soya or their oils. That’s not to say you should never eat these foods.

Meanwhile, load up on chia, flax, walnut, pecans, macadamia and seafood to swing the omega-3/6 ration in your favour.

To give you an idea here’s the ratio of omega-3 to 6 fats in common foods.

omega-3 omega-6
cold-water fish 100% 0%
chia 70% 22%
flaxseed 57% 14%
walnut 52% 10%
canola (rape seed) 9% 20%
peanut 0% 32%
sesame 0% 42%
soya 7% 51%
corn 0% 54%
sunflower 0% 65%
safflower 0% 75%
olive oil 0% 6%
Further info

Vegan/Plant-based – Omega 3 and Phospholipids

As you are vegan, it is close to impossible to get sufficient phospholipids and omega-3 DHA from your food alone. As a consequence you’re going to need to supplement a plant-based source of both.

Regarding DHA, please read the Reports: Veganism, DHA and Brain Health and Phospholipids – A Challenge on a Vegan Diet  in your Library

But what intake of choline can you achieve from a vegan diet alone? Here’s a list of the best plant-based food for choline listed in the order of how much you could get in a reasonable serving*:

CHOLINE QUANTITIES IN FOODS

Food Choline per serving Per 100g
Soya milk (1 cup/250ml/9fl oz) 57mg 23mg
Shiitake mushrooms (1 cup/145g/5oz) 54mg 37mg
Soya flour (12.5g/1/4oz) 24mg 192mg
Peas (1 cup/160g/53/4oz) 47mg 30mg
Quinoa, raw (1/3 cup/60g/21/8oz) 42mg 70mg
Beans, raw (1/3 cup/60g/21/8oz) black,
white, pinto, kidney
40mg 67mg
Broccoli, cauliflower or
sprouts (1 cup/90g/31/4oz)
36mg 40mg
Tofu (1/2 cup/125g/41/2oz) 35mg 28mg
Hummus (1/2 cup/120g/41/4oz) 34mg 28mg
Chickpeas (1/4 can) 33mg 33mg
Baked beans (1/4 can) 31mg 31mg
Flaxseeds (small handful) 22mg 78mg
Pistachio (small handful) 20mg 71mg
Pine nuts (small handful) 18mg 65mg
Cashews (small handful) 17mg 61mg
Wholegrain bread (2 slices/50g/13/4oz) 17mg 34mg
Avocado (1/2) 14mg 28mg
Almonds (small handful/50g/13/4oz) 12mg 42mg
Peanuts (small handful) 12mg 42mg
Wheatgerm (tbsp 7g/1/8oz) 12mg 178mg
Almonds or peanut butter (tbsp) 10mg 61mg

Source: USDA choline content database and https://nutritiondata.self.com* Many foods have not been analysed for choline, and measurements do vary, so this is a guide rather than a definitive list.

What does this mean for your daily diet?

Here are some vegan foods that you could include in your meals to maximise choline intake, and how much each food would give you (we’re not including all foods that you would eat at these meals, just those ingredients that deliver a significant amount of choline):

Food Choline
BREAKFAST
A cup of soya milk (250ml/9fl oz) 57mg
Small handful of nuts or seeds
(Flax, chia, almonds, etc.)
20mg
LUNCH
A cup of cooked quinoa (1/3 cup/55g/2oz raw) 43mg
A serving (100g/31/2oz) of either broccoli, 36mg
cauliflower or Brussels sprouts
36mg
1/2 avocado 14mg
SNACKS
A tbsp of almond or peanut butter 10mg
Hummus (1/2 cup/120g/41/4oz) 34mg
2 slices of wholegrain bread 17mg
DINNER
A serving of tofu (125g/41/2oz) or beans 35–40mg
Shiitake mushrooms (1/2 cup/35g/11/4oz) 27mg
A serving (100/31/2oz) of either broccoli,
cauliflower or Brussels sprouts
36mg
TOTAL 332mg

In reality, you are unlikely to achieve the 332mg total listed in the table above every day, and it would be quite limiting on your food choices, so a realistic target would be to achieve 300mg of choline from food. If you are aiming to achieve 500mg, which is the low end of optimal – more than this might be optimal in pregnancy – that leaves a shortfall of around 200mg of choline, suggesting the need for supplementation.

The report explains what your options are between food and supplementation.

Further info

The importance of phospholipids

Neurons – brain and nerve cells – are primarily made out of what is called ‘phosphorylated DHA’. This is DHA that is bound to a kind of fat called a phospholipid.

Seafood contains phosphorylated DHA, but DHA supplements, whether derived from fish oil or algae, are not phosphorylated. Hence, the DHA from a supplement needs to be attached to phospholipids to work. This attachment is achieved by a process using B vitamins called methylation – it’s a bit like using those glues where you have two tubes and have to mix a squeeze of one with the other for the glue to work. The ‘mixer’ in this case is the B vitamins in your body attaching the DHA to the phospholipids. If you have no phospholipids, or no DHA or B vitamins, the mix is not going to work.

Phospholipids

There are several different kinds of phospholipids with strange names all starting with ‘phosphatidyl’, such as phosphatidylcholine (PC), phosphatidylserine (PS), phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylethanolamine. To a large extent these can all be made from phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidyl choline is also used to make a memory molecule called acetylcholine which is essential for memory.

© Patrick Holford & Piatkus

As a group of nutrients, they are classified as semi-essential because we can make some, but not enough, for optimal health and especially optimal brain health.

As a consequence, there are moves afoot to classify choline (which can be easily attached to the ‘phosphatidyl’ part) as an essential nutrient with a recommended intake. This has come about due to the growing evidence that insufficient choline in pregnancy leads to cognitive impairment and developmental delay.

This is particularly important for vegans because, like DHA, there’s not so much choline in plant-based foods, but there is some in foods such as quinoa, soya, beans, nuts and broccoli – which are also important foods for protein, as we saw earlier. (If you’re vegan we’ll send you an email shortly to let you know what to do).

Choline

Currently an adequate intake of choline is defined as between 400mg and 520mg a day, the latter amount for pregnant and breast-feeding women. This is based on how much choline you need for healthy fat metabolism, liver function and reducing homocysteine levels. You also need choline to utilise cholesterol in the liver and brain.

Cholesterol is a vital brain component but it has to be contained between the phosphorylated DHA. It’s like a sandwich. But these levels don’t take into account what’s being learnt about choline’s role in brain development. A good estimate of optimum daily choline intake would be at least 500mg and you could,  perhaps, double this in pregnancy. Choline is not included in most prenatal supplements, so this is something you’ll need to either include in your diet or supplement (see below).

Most important is choline’s role in building, and maintaining, a healthy brain. A pregnant woman’s intake impacts the cognitive abilities of their child. Twenty years ago, we knew that pregnant rats that were fed choline halfway through their pregnancy had more connections between brain cells, plus improved learning ability and better memory recall. Now we know that it’s also true for babies, with several recent trials showing similar results, indicating that more choline in pregnancy enhances cognitive development.

An example of this is a study where women in their third trimester of pregnancy were given either 480mg of choline or almost double this – 930mg. The babies’ information processing speed was then tested at 4, 7, 10 and 13 months.

Not only were the babies of the mothers who were given the higher dose faster, but the longer the mother had been given even the lower dose, the faster were the child’s reactions. The authors concluded that ‘even modest increases in maternal choline intake during pregnancy may produce cognitive benefits for offspring’. Seven years later, there will still memory advantages in the children whose mother had extra choline during pregnancy. Babies are born with blood choline levels three times higher than their mother, illustrating how vital this nutrient is for building neuronal connections, which new-born babies do at a rate of up to a million new connections a second! An optimal intake for brain function is likely to be a lot higher than the 400–500mg recommended for adults, and higher still in pregnancy.

Brain cells are made of a membrane containing choline (and other phospholipids) attached to the omega-3 fat DHA. Without choline, therefore, the omega-3 doesn’t work. The attaching of the two depends on methylation, a process that is dependent on B vitamins, especially B12, folate and B6. Choline helps methylation, and healthy methylation, indicated by a low blood level of homocysteine, helps to synthesise choline. You need all three – DHA, choline and B vitamins, especially B12 – so if you are lacking in DHA, or in vitamin B12, then you’ll be doubly dependent on getting enough choline.

Choline-rich foods

By far the richest dietary sources of choline are fish, eggs and organ meats, but there is a significant amount of choline in plant-based foods as well, notably: soya, as in tofu and soya milk; quinoa; seeds, including flax seeds; nuts such as almonds; peanuts; and cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli, cauliflower and Brussels sprouts.

The long and short of it is that it is wise to eat eggs and fish, if not meat, to ensure you get enough brain-building phospholipids. All fish, whether white or oily, is a very rich source of phospholipids.

Further info

The myth of cholesterol and low-fat diets

A major study of thousands of older people found two blood test markers that predict increased dementia risk: 1. having a high homocysteine level (a consequence of low levels of B vitamins) and 2. having a low cholesterol level. This makes sense because cholesterol is vital for brain function. In an earlier email you will have seen that cholesterol is part of the structure of brain cells, so it makes sense that if you have too little, your ability to think optimally will be affected. (Memory loss is a very common symptom of statin medication).

In this study, having a cholesterol level of around 4mmol/l, and an LDL cholesterol around 2mmol/l, was strongly associated with an increased risk of dementia.

The problem is that too many people with raised cholesterol, which is anything above 6 mmol/L, are put on statins which block cholesterol production. But to sell more statins the ‘normal’ cholesterol level got pushed down from 6 to 5 mmol/l. The problem with this is a well-known adverse effect of statins: memory loss, as well as another effect: loss of sex drive as cholesterol is vital for making sex hormones.

People have been misled into thinking the following 3 statements are true:

  1. Eating fat and cholesterol rich foods raises cholesterol
  2. Raised blood cholesterol leads to arterial blockage
  3. Blocking cholesterol production with statins reduces heart disease

Every one of these statements are wrong. There is no reason to avoid eggs or shellfish, high in cholesterol. Cholesterol is a good guy, not a bad guy and your body will make more if needed. There’s no need to avoid fat unless you are one of the one in 500 people with heart disease who have familial hypercholesterolemia, a genetic disorder, in which case cholesterol-lowering statins are a must.

Excessive total and ‘LDL’ cholesterol (the so-called bad guy) can occur from eating too many carbs, not fat. The more important marker for cholesterol here is triglycerides – blood fats made from sugar (and alcohol). We talk about this in the LOW GL domain.

Walnuts help, too. An analysis of 13 studies, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition finds that walnuts, given for 4 to 24 weeks on a daily basis, lowers ‘LDL’ cholesterol, which is the one you don’t want too much of.

Most importantly, you want your triglycerides low, your HDL cholesterol high and making up one third of your TOTAL cholesterol. If you’re not sure what yours is and want to find out, in the UK there’s an Essential Health Check home test kit you can buy from YorkTest, which is extremely good value. It also tests your B12, folate and vitamin D. Your doctor can also test these for you.

Further info

Go nuts and green

Seafood is not the only source of omega-3 fats, nor is omega-3 the only essential fat. Nuts, seeds and their oils that come from a hotter climate concentrate omega-6 fats, while colder climate nuts and seeds, such as walnut and chia seeds, concentrate omega-3 fats.

This vegetable-based source of omega-3 is also rich in the leaves of colder climate plants such as kale, broccoli, cabbage and other greens. This type of omega-3, called ALA (alpha-linolenic acid), must be converted into DHA to build the brain – and not much does get converted. That’s why oily fish, which are really cold-water carnivorous fish, concentrate DHA up the food chain, and their oils are a direct source of DHA.

© Patrick Holford & Piatkus

DHA can be derived from cold water seaweed, another cold climate leaf.

What’s interesting is that more women than men, including pregnant women and non-fish eating women, seem to convert more ALA into DHA as if the brain needs DHA so much that, if it’s missing but ALA is still present, it makes as much as it can.

Doubly interesting, and concerning, is that a pregnant woman’s body, if deprived of enough DHA, will actually substitute an ineffective fat, oleic acid, to build an ineffective brain, and the baby is born with a defective brain which is unlikely to ever fully recover. That’s how vital omega-3 DHA is both for a baby’s brain and yours.

So here’s what to eat and make sure they form a major part of your daily diet:

  • walnuts
  • pecans
  • macadamia
  • chia, or flax seeds (raw, not roasted)
  • kale
  • spinach
  • greens
  • broccoli
  • cabbage
  • lettuce
  • rocket
  • watercress

Think in terms of having a small handful of nuts or seeds and a large handful of these kind of vegetables.

Walnuts, particularly, are associated with improved and cognitive performance.

Chia seeds don’t need grinding as they absorb and become soft in liquid so you can add them to cereal or smoothies, even soups. Be sure to up your intake of water/herbal tea etc as they are very absorbent.

Further info