Omega-3
Essential fats your body can't make on its own. EPA and DHA protect your heart, reduce inflammation, and support brain function — and most people don't get nearly enough.
Omega-3 fatty acids (EPA and DHA) are structural components of every cell membrane in your body and powerful inflammation regulators. Your body can't make them — you have to eat them (fatty fish) or supplement them. Most Indians get less than 200 mg/day; research-backed benefits start at 1000 mg.
Good for you if: You eat fish less than 2–3 times per week, have elevated triglycerides, want to lower systemic inflammation, or are looking for brain and heart protection as you age.
Dive deeper into the researchCommon side effects
- Fishy aftertaste or burps — take with food or choose enteric-coated capsules
- Mild GI upset (nausea, loose stools) — usually resolves within a week
- May increase bleeding time — tell your doctor if you take blood thinners
What does omega-3 do?
There are two omega-3s that matter: EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid). They do different things:
EPA is the anti-inflammatory powerhouse. Your body converts it into resolvins and protectins — molecules that actively shut down inflammation. This is why EPA-heavy supplements are prescribed for high triglycerides and used to reduce cardiovascular risk.
DHA is the structural builder. It makes up about 40% of the fat in your brain and 60% of the fat in your retina. It's critical for brain function, memory, and visual acuity — and becomes even more important as you age.
What can you expect?
- Lower triglycerides — 15–30% reduction at therapeutic doses (2000+ mg EPA+DHA)
- Reduced inflammation — lower hsCRP, IL-6, and TNF-alpha levels within 8–12 weeks
- Better mood — meta-analyses show EPA-dominant omega-3 reduces depression symptoms
- Joint pain relief — comparable to NSAIDs for some people with inflammatory joint pain
- Dry eye improvement — DHA supports tear film stability
- Cardiovascular protection — reduced risk of cardiac events in people with existing heart disease
How to take it
1000–2000 mg combined EPA+DHA per day, taken with a meal containing fat. Split into 2 doses if using higher amounts. Take with your fattiest meal for best absorption — omega-3s are fat-soluble.
Important: read your label carefully. A "1000 mg fish oil" capsule usually contains only 300 mg EPA+DHA. You need to look at the EPA and DHA lines specifically.
For high triglycerides: 2000–4000 mg EPA+DHA/day (this is a therapeutic dose — discuss with your doctor). The prescription-grade EPA product Icosapent Ethyl uses 4000 mg EPA/day.
Which form to buy?
- Triglyceride-form fish oil — best absorbed (30–50% better than ethyl ester). Look for "rTG" or "triglyceride form" on the label
- Algae oil — the vegan option. Comes from the same algae fish eat. Higher in DHA, lower in EPA. Good if you're vegetarian or concerned about heavy metals
- Ethyl ester — cheaper but less bioavailable. Fine if you take it with a fatty meal
- Enteric-coated — prevents fishy burps by dissolving in the intestine instead of the stomach
Quality matters: Look for IFOS (International Fish Oil Standards) certification, third-party tested for mercury, PCBs, and oxidation. Store in the fridge to prevent rancidity. In India, expect to pay ₹500–1500/month for quality fish oil with adequate EPA+DHA content.
Want to see if your omega-3 levels are actually improving?
eterni tracks your Omega-3 Index, triglycerides, and inflammation markers — so you know if your fish oil is doing its job.
Get early accessFrequently Asked Questions
How much omega-3 should I take daily?
Aim for at least 1000–2000 mg combined EPA+DHA per day. For heart health, target the higher end. For general wellness, 1000 mg is a good baseline. Look at the EPA and DHA numbers on the label, not just "fish oil" — a 1000 mg fish oil capsule often contains only 300 mg combined EPA+DHA.
Is fish oil or algae oil better?
Both provide EPA and DHA effectively. Fish oil is cheaper and more widely available. Algae oil is the vegetarian/vegan source and avoids heavy metal concerns. Algae oil tends to be higher in DHA than EPA. If you eat fish 2–3 times per week, you may not need either.
What's the Omega-3 Index and why does it matter?
The Omega-3 Index measures the percentage of EPA+DHA in your red blood cell membranes. Target: 8–12%. Below 4% is associated with highest cardiovascular risk. Most Indians without supplementation score 3–5%. It's the best way to know if your omega-3 intake is actually working.
Can omega-3 reduce inflammation?
Yes. EPA and DHA get converted into resolvins and protectins — molecules that actively resolve inflammation. Studies show omega-3 supplementation lowers hsCRP, IL-6, and TNF-alpha. The anti-inflammatory effect is dose-dependent and takes 8–12 weeks to fully show up in lab work.
How it works in your body
EPA and DHA are incorporated into cell membrane phospholipids throughout your body. From there, they serve as substrates for specialized pro-resolving mediators (SPMs) — resolvins, protectins, and maresins — that actively resolve inflammation rather than just blocking it (like NSAIDs do).
EPA competes with arachidonic acid (AA) for cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase enzymes, reducing the production of pro-inflammatory prostaglandins and leukotrienes. DHA is concentrated in neuronal membranes, where it modulates membrane fluidity, receptor function, and synaptic plasticity — critical for cognition and neuroprotection.
In the liver, EPA activates PPAR-alpha, increasing fatty acid oxidation and reducing VLDL production — which is why it lowers triglycerides so effectively.
What the studies show
- REDUCE-IT (2018): 4g/day icosapent ethyl (pure EPA) reduced cardiovascular events by 25% in statin-treated patients with elevated triglycerides — the landmark trial
- Triglycerides: Meta-analyses show 15–30% triglyceride reduction at doses of 2000+ mg EPA+DHA/day
- Inflammation: Systematic reviews confirm reductions in hsCRP (~0.2 mg/L), IL-6, and TNF-alpha with supplementation
- Depression: Meta-analysis of 26 RCTs found EPA-dominant omega-3 supplements significantly reduced depression scores (SMD: -0.28)
- Cognitive decline: Higher DHA levels associated with 47% lower risk of all-cause dementia in the Framingham Heart Study
- Joint health: 2–3 g/day omega-3 reduced morning stiffness and joint tenderness comparably to NSAIDs in some RA trials
Side effects & safety
Omega-3 supplements are very safe. Here's what to know:
- Fishy burps/aftertaste — the most common complaint. Solve it by taking with food, freezing capsules, or choosing enteric-coated or algae-based products
- GI upset — nausea, bloating, or loose stools in ~5% of users, usually in the first week. Splitting the dose across meals helps
- Increased bleeding time — omega-3 has mild antiplatelet effects. At standard doses (<3g/day), this isn't clinically significant. But if you take warfarin, aspirin, or are having surgery, inform your doctor
- Fishy body odor — rare, usually indicates a rancid product. Check the smell of your oil — it should smell like the ocean, not like old fish
- LDL cholesterol — DHA (not EPA) can slightly raise LDL in some people. If this concerns you, choose an EPA-dominant product
Contamination risk: Low-quality fish oil can contain mercury, PCBs, and dioxins. Always choose third-party tested, IFOS-certified products. Algae oil avoids this concern entirely.
Which labs to check
- Omega-3 Index — the gold standard; measures EPA+DHA as percentage of RBC fats. Target: 8–12%. Retest 12 weeks after starting
- Triglycerides — the most responsive lipid marker to omega-3 supplementation
- hsCRP — tracks inflammatory response to omega-3 over 8–12 weeks
- Lipid panel — monitor HDL, LDL, triglycerides as a set
Know what's working. Know what's not.
eterni connects your lab results, supplements, and retests — so you can see the trajectory, not just a snapshot.
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