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Dietary Components and Nutritional Strategies for Dementia Prevention in the Elderly.

Current Alzheimer research
January 1, 2023
Xi-Peng Cao et al. (5 authors)
ReviewJournal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to summarize the role of dietary copper, particularly in combination with saturated fat, in dementia risk among the elderly.

Results Summary

The study found that a diet rich in both dietary copper and saturated fat might increase dementia risk, though no specific details on copper alone were provided.

Population

Elderly individuals

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (15)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Polyphenols
decrease
dementia
the elderly
-
might decrease the risk
#1
Folate
decrease
dementia
the elderly
-
might decrease the risk
#2
Vitamin D
decrease
dementia
the elderly
-
might decrease the risk
#3
Omega-3 fatty acids
decrease
dementia
the elderly
-
might decrease the risk
#4
β-carotene
decrease
dementia
the elderly
-
might decrease the risk
#5
Consumption of green leafy vegetables
decrease
dementia prevention
the elderly
-
is recommended
#6
Consumption of green tea
decrease
dementia prevention
the elderly
-
is recommended
#7
Consumption of fish
decrease
dementia prevention
the elderly
-
is recommended
#8
Consumption of fruits
decrease
dementia prevention
the elderly
-
is recommended
#9
Saturated fat
increase
dementia risk
the elderly
-
might increase
#10
a diet rich in both dietary copper and saturated fat
increase
dementia risk
the elderly
-
might increase
#11
aluminum from drinking water
increase
dementia risk
the elderly
-
might increase
#12
heavy drinking
increase
dementia risk
the elderly
-
might increase
#13
Healthy dietary patterns
increase
cognitive benefits
the elderly
-
were proven to bring more cognitive benefits
#14
Mediterranean diet
increase
cognitive benefits
the elderly
-
were proven to bring more cognitive benefits
#15
Abstract

BACKGROUND: For decades, evidence from observational studies and randomized controlled trials has converged to suggest associations of dietary components, foods, and dietary patterns with dementia. With population aging and a projected exponential expansion of people living with dementia, formulating nutritional strategies for dementia prevention has become a research hotspot. OBJECTIVE: This review aimed to summarize available data on the roles of specific dietary components, food groups, and dietary patterns in dementia prevention among the elderly. METHODS: Database search was carried out using PubMed, the Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and Medline. RESULTS: Polyphenols, folate, vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, and β-carotene might decrease the risk of dementia. Consumption of green leafy vegetables, green tea, fish, and fruits is recommended. However, saturated fat, a diet rich in both dietary copper and saturated fat, aluminum from drinking water, and heavy drinking might increase dementia risk. Healthy dietary patterns, especially the Mediterranean diet, were proven to bring more cognitive benefits than single dietary components. CONCLUSION: We discussed and summarized the evidence on the roles of dietary components and patterns in dementia prevention among the elderly and found that some factors were closely associated with dementia risk in elderly. This may pave the way for the identification of dietary components and patterns as new therapeutic targets for dementia prevention in the elderly population.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AgedAnimalsHumansDietDiet, MediterraneanFolic AcidAgingPolyphenolsDementia
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy30/10
Quality75/10
0
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.05
Weight Score1.09
Normalized Score0.47
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