Omega 3 Protection Against Air Pollution

New Omega 3 Research

New research suggests that eating more than one servings per seven-day stretch of fish may allow older women to ingest enough omega-3 unsaturated fats to prevent the impacts of air contamination on the brain, as indicated by a study published today in the clinical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. Moreover, the study by author Dr Ka Khe a professor of epidemiology and obstetrics and gynaecology at Columbia University said Omega-3 unsaturated fats have shown to battle inflammation and keep up brain structure in ageing cells also helps in reducing brain damage caused by neurotoxins like lead and mercury.

Food and Brain Connection

Furthermore, an experiment conducted by researchers scrutinizing white women over 70 living in areas with higher air contaminated levels. The highest amount of brain shrinkage detected in those having the lowest of omega 3 fatty acids in their blood. Interesting, researchers determined, on average how much fish the women consumed per week.  Estimating the measure of omega-3 unsaturated fats in their blood. They saw that women\’s exposure to contamination depended on their residences. Lead author of the research Cheng Chen a postdoctoral scientist at Columbia University Irving Medical Center stated that a lot more research was required to ensure the results for a vast population.

Air Pollution Damaging Lungs

Similarly, air pollution particles are microscopic and can easily enter the lungs causing lung diseases. Highlighted by neurologist Dr Richard Isaacson. An Alzheimer\’s specialist at New York, not included in the research. The brain’s white matter is a basic need for communication between the different parts of the brain\’s grey matter. Loss of white matter causes disruption. An increase in omega 3 intake helps as an anti-inflammatory.  It also shields the white matter of the brain. Isaacson said, there’s no one pill answer to cognitive decline, however.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

A critical analysis of Drop Site News’ report alleging a UK–Pakistan “swap deal,” exposing its reliance on anonymous sources, partisan framing, and legally impossible claims.

Anonymous Sources, Big Claims, Thin Ground

A recent Drop Site News report claims a covert UK–Pakistan exchange of convicted sex offenders for political dissidents. But a closer look shows the story rests on hearsay, anonymous insiders, and a narrative shaped more by partisan loyalties than evidence. From misrepresenting legally declared propagandists as persecuted critics to ignoring the legal impossibility of such a swap, this report illustrates how modern journalism can slip into activism. When sensational claims outrun facts and legality, credibility collapses, and so does the line between holding power accountable and manufacturing a story.

Read More »
A sharp critique of Zabihullah Mujahid’s recent evasive remarks on the TTP, exposing Taliban hypocrisy and Afghan complicity in cross-border militancy.

Zabihullah Mujahid’s Bizarre Statement on TTP: A Lesson in Hypocrisy and Evasion

Zabihullah Mujahid’s recent statement dismissing the TTP as Pakistan’s “internal issue” and claiming Pashto lacks the word “terrorist” is a glaring act of evasion. By downplaying a UN-listed militant group hosted on Afghan soil, the Taliban spokesperson attempts to deflect responsibility, despite overwhelming evidence of TTP sanctuaries, leadership, and operations in Afghanistan. His remarks reveal not linguistic nuance, but calculated hypocrisy and political convenience.

Read More »
Beyond the Rhetoric: What Muttaqi’s Address Reveals About Afghan Policy

Beyond the Rhetoric: What Muttaqi’s Address Reveals About Afghan Policy

Interim Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi’s recent address sought to reframe Afghanistan’s strained ties with Pakistan through a narrative of victimhood and denial. From dismissing cross-border militancy to overstating economic resilience, his claims contradict on-ground realities and historical patterns. A closer examination reveals strategic deflection rather than accountability, with serious implications for regional peace and security.

Read More »
We Want Deliverance

We Want Deliverance

Political mobilization in South Asia is not rooted in policy or institutions but in a profound yearning for deliverance. From Modi’s civilizational aura in India to Imran Khan’s revolutionary moral narrative in Pakistan, voters seek not managers of the state but messianic figures who promise total transformation. This “Messiah Complex” fuels a cycle of charismatic rise, institutional erosion, and eventual democratic breakdown, a pattern embedded in the region’s political psychology and historical imagination.

Read More »