Some people are sensitive to the peroxidation of fish oil. I used to take a 2-3g daily, it used to make me awake/alert. Then I started having a negative reaction to it, some sort of sleepiness etc. It might be connected to a deficiency vitamin E, or perhaps you should just stop taking fish oil.
The drop in temperature sounds like your metabolism is dropping, that might be an anti-thyroid effect. Fish oil can also be immunonosuppressive as well.
My negative reaction to fish oil was what originally got me reading Ray Peat.
Either way, I'd stop the fish oil.
You might be on to something rwac. if I stop fish oil for a few days of week and then start up again, it's wonderful. Specially when I combine it with uridine. After a couple days, I start getting the sleepy and depressive symptoms. Maybe Vitamin E is getting used up rapidly ? Same effect occurs with one 500 mg capsule of krill oil. Found this:
Z Ernahrungswiss. 1991 Sep;30(3):174-80.
On the problematic nature of vitamin E requirements: net vitamin E.
Abstract
The requirement for vitamin E is closely related to the dietary intake of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). By the protective mechanism to prevent PUFA from being peroxidized, vitamin E is metabolically consumed. In addition, PUFA impair the intestinal absorption of vitamin E. Therefore PUFA generate an additional vitamin E requirement on the order of 0.6, 0.9, 1.2, 1.5, and 1.8 mg vitamin E (RRR-alpha-tocopherol-equivalents), respectively, for 1 g of dienoic, trienoic, tetraenoic, pentaenoic, and hexaenoic acid. For this reason, the gross vitamin E content of food containing PUFA does not allow an evaluation of this food as a source of vitamin E. A suitable measure is the net vitamin E content, i.e., gross vitamin E minus the amount needed for PUFA protection. Therefore, some food-stuffs generally considered as vitamin-E sources, as concluded from their gross vitamin E content, cause in reality a vitamin E deficiency if not sufficiently compensated by other vitamin E supplying food constituents. Examples of the net vitamin E content of some fats and oils, fish and nuts are shown. Consequences for food composition data and food labeling and the problem of meeting the vitamin-E requirements are discussed. PMID:
1763554
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Edited by Lufega, 03 April 2014 - 06:45 PM.