Acide gras Supplements: The Complete Type Guide
High-level guide to how acide gras supplements fit together, where the category is coherent, and where it becomes too broad to treat as one mechanism.
On this page
At a Glance
Attribute
Collection Type
- Detail
- Supplement type / high-level category guide
Attribute
Members
- Detail
- 12 registry members in this type
Attribute
Primary Goals
- Detail
- membrane support, inflammatory-signaling support, lipid support, and specialized fat delivery
Attribute
Main Subgroups
- Detail
- 1.4 Fatty Acids
Attribute
Overall Evidence Level
- Detail
- The category is most coherent when it distinguishes foundational omega-3 support from more specialized lipid or membrane-support products.
Attribute
Key Monitoring / Caution
- Detail
- The page should avoid treating all fatty-acid supplements as though they share the same evidence quality, oxidation risk, or intended use.
Overview
The Basics
This type includes omega-3-rich oils, specialty lipid supplements, and phospholipid-oriented compounds. The common thread is lipid biology, but the practical intent varies widely across members.
Representative members in this type include Fish Oil (EPA/DHA), Krill Oil, Algal Oil, Cod Liver Oil, Flaxseed Oil, Evening Primrose Oil, Borage Oil, CLA (Conjugated Linoleic Acid). The full type is broader than any one stack or one mechanism, which is why the page works best as an orientation layer rather than as a recommendation to treat the whole type as one protocol family.
The Science
The category is most coherent when it distinguishes foundational omega-3 support from more specialized lipid or membrane-support products.
How This Type Fits Together
The Basics
This type becomes much easier to understand when its subgroups stay separate. The most useful question is not whether a supplement belongs to the type. It is what role the supplement plays inside the type.
The Science
- Fatty Acids:
Fish Oil (EPA/DHA),Krill Oil,Algal Oil,Cod Liver Oil,Flaxseed Oil,Evening Primrose Oil, ...
Intent And Use Cases Across The Type
The Basics
The intent of this category is to group supplements that share a broad family resemblance, not to imply that they all solve the same problem in the same way.
The Science
This type includes omega-3-rich oils, specialty lipid supplements, and phospholipid-oriented compounds. The common thread is lipid biology, but the practical intent varies widely across members.
Formulation quality, oxidation stability, and meal context matter at least as much as clock timing for this type.
Where Type Pages Get Misleading
The Basics
The page should avoid treating all fatty-acid supplements as though they share the same evidence quality, oxidation risk, or intended use.
The Science
- Broad categories can make weak-evidence members look more established than they are.
- Some supplements in the same type may still work in completely different practical lanes.
- A type guide is strongest when it helps narrow the field, not when it encourages collecting the whole category.
- Category labels should never replace fit, monitoring, or interaction review.
Comparative Notes
The Basics
The standalone guide is still the right place for dosing, safety nuance, and evidence depth. The type guide exists to explain how members in the category relate to each other.
The Science
A good reading order is: identify the relevant subgroup first, then compare the strongest members in that subgroup, then decide whether the category label is actually useful for the goal at hand.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the main purpose of a type guide?
To explain how a broad supplement family hangs together and where it breaks apart into more useful subgroups.
What is the biggest mistake with category-level supplement browsing?
Assuming that everything inside the category belongs in one stack or shares one evidence standard.
How should this page be used alongside the standalone guides?
As the map. The standalone pages remain the deeper references for safety, evidence, interactions, and practical use.
Related Guide Context
Fish Oil (EPA/DHA),Krill Oil,Algal Oil,Cod Liver Oil,Flaxseed Oil,Evening Primrose Oil,Borage Oil,CLA (Conjugated Linoleic Acid)