Men who follow a healthful diet
could be protecting their brains, according to a new study that tracked a large
group of men for more than 2 decades.
Researchers from
the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, MA, analyzed data from
a study that had followed 27,842 men for 26 years.
The men had all
filled in detailed surveys about their food and drink intake at the start of
the study in 1986 — when they were aged 51 years, on average — and then every 4
years until 2002.
The follow-up
lasted until 2012, by which time their average age was in the mid- to late-70s.
During the last
few years of the follow-up, they had also completed short tests to find out
whether they had noticed any decline in their own ability to think and remember
things.
The analysis
showed that consuming higher amounts of certain foods and drinks was tied to
lower risk of decline in memory and thinking skills.
The foods that
most strongly showed this effect were leafy greens, red and dark orange
vegetables, berry fruits, and orange juice.
The journal Neurology recently
published a paper about the study and its findings.
"Our
studies," says first author Dr. Changzheng Yuan, who works in the school's
departments of nutrition and
epidemiology, "provide further evidence [that] dietary choices can be
important to maintain your brain health."
Subjective
cognitive function test
The purpose of the
subjective cognitive function (SCF) tests that the men completed was to discern
changes in memory and thinking abilities that they had noticed themselves.
The SCF test
contains six items, and the study authors note that its "validity was
supported by strong associations" with a gene that is linked to Alzheimer's disease.
The subjective
test can uncover decline in memory and thinking skills before they begin to
show up in objective tests.
The men completed
the SCF test twice: once in 2008 and again at the end of the follow-up in 2012.
Typical questions included:
"Do you have
more trouble than usual remembering a short list of items, such as a shopping
list?"
"Do you have
more trouble than usual following a group conversation or a plot in a TV
program due to your memory?"
The authors note
that they "categorized the average of the [two] scores as good, moderate,
and poor SCF."
Early warning of
mild cognitive impairment
Any memory decline
revealed in the SCF results could herald the start of mild cognitive impairment
(MCI).
MCI is a condition
that often precedes Alzheimer's disease, the most common form of dementia. However, not
everyone with MCI will develop Alzheimer's.
In the United
States, around 80 percent of those "who fit the definition of amnestic MCI" develop
Alzheimer's disease within 7 years, according to the National Institute on
Aging.
Amnestic MCI is
the form of MCI that is most often tied to memory loss.
In the recent
study, 55 percent of the men scored "good" on the SCF test, 38
percent scored "moderate," and 7 percent scored "poor."
Consumption of
fruits and vegetables
The team split the
men into five groups according to their fruit and vegetable intake. The results
showed that the group that ate the most vegetables consumed about 6 servings
per day, and that the group that ate the least consumed 2.
The daily consumption
of fruit ranged from 3 servings for the group that ate the most to half a
serving for the group that ate the least.
A comparison of
the vegetable consumption against the SCF scores revealed that:
The men who ate
the most vegetables were 34 percent less likely to report having experienced a
reduction in memory function.
Of the men who ate
the most vegetables, 6.6 percent scored poor on the SCF, compared with 7.9
percent of those who ate the least.
The results also
showed a 47 percent less chance of having a poor SCF score among the men who
drank orange juice every day compared with those who only drank it once per
month. The link was most relevant for older men who drank orange juice every
day.
In addition, men
who ate the most fruit each day were the least likely to have a poor SCF score,
but this link lost its strength after the team considered the effect of other
foods.
The team also
found that high levels of fruit and vegetable consumption near the start of the
study period was linked to a lower chance of having a poor SCF score some 20
years later.
Whether or not the
men kept eating lots of fruits and vegetables — up to 6 years before taking the
SCF test — had no effect on the link.
Source: Medical News Today
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