A third possibility is that the dose was wrong. Previous studies have used 1–2 g/day rather than the 3 g/day used by Dr. Fenton et al.
+(1). We conducted a dose-ranging add-on study of schizophrenia patients in which placebo was compared with 1 g/day, 2 g/day, or 4 g/day of ethyl EPA
+(6). The best results were achieved at the 2-g/day dose, which produced an increase in red cell EPA without any decrease in red cell arachidonic acid. At 4 g/day, there was no beneficial effect, and the increase in red cell EPA was accompanied by a substantial decrease in arachidonic acid, a fatty acid that plays a central role in many neuronal signal transduction systems
+(7). A similar dose-ranging study in depression
+(8) also showed a bell-shaped dose-response curve, with a strong beneficial effect at an ethyl EPA dose of 1 g/day and smaller effects at higher doses. The large decrease in the arachidonic acid/EPA ratio reported by Dr. Fenton et al. suggests that the ethyl EPA dose may have been too high because it depleted arachidonic acid.