Diet and Alzheimer's dementia - Nutritional approach to modulate inflammation.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore the pro- and anti-inflammatory activity of dietary components, including Advanced Glycation End Products (d-AGE), and their potential role in Alzheimer's disease prevention and treatment.
Results Summary
The abstract suggests that dietary factors, including d-AGE, may modulate inflammation, which could influence Alzheimer's disease progression, but does not provide specific findings on d-AGE's effects.
Population
Elderly population at risk for or with Alzheimer's disease (not explicitly stated but implied).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
synergistic action of combined supplementation and complex dietary patterns | increase | benefits | - | stronger | provides stronger benefits | #1 |
dietary advanced glycation end products (d-AGE) | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #2 |
gut microbiota | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #3 |
butyrate | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #4 |
vitamin D | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #5 |
fatty acids | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #6 |
vitamins | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #7 |
flavonoids | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #8 |
polyphenols | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #9 |
probiotics | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #10 |
d-AGE | neutral | inflammation | - | - | pro- and anti-inflammatory activity | #11 |
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disease causing dementia in the elderly population. Due to the fact that there is still no cure for Alzheimer's dementia and available treatment strategies bring only symptomatic benefits, there is a pressing demand for other effective strategies such as diet. Since the inflammation hypothesis gained considerable significance in the AD pathogenesis, elucidating the modulatory role of dietary factors on inflammation may help to prevent, delay the onset and slow the progression of AD. Current evidence clearly shows that synergistic action of combined supplementation and complex dietary patterns provides stronger benefits than any single component considered separately. Recent studies reveal the growing importance of novel factors such as dietary advanced glycation end products (d-AGE), gut microbiota, butyrate and vitamin D CONCLUSION: This paper summarizes the available evidence of pro- and anti-inflammatory activity of some dietary components including fatty acids, vitamins, flavonoids, polyphenols, probiotics and d-AGE, and their potential for AD prevention and treatment.