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Diet's Role in Modifying Risk of Alzheimer's Disease: History and Present Understanding.

Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD
May 5, 2023
William B Grant et al. (2 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess the role of the DASH diet in modifying Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk by comparing it with other dietary patterns and identifying associated dietary risk factors.

Results Summary

The study found that the DASH diet, along with Mediterranean and MIND diets, was associated with a lower risk of AD compared to the Western dietary pattern. Higher consumption of fruits, legumes, nuts, omega-3 fatty acids, vegetables, and whole grains was linked to reduced AD risk.

Population

General population, with a focus on dietary patterns and AD risk across multiple countries.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (22)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
high-energy diets
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as important risk factors
#1
fat
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as important risk factor
#2
meat
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as important risk factor
#3
obesity
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as important risk factor
#4
national dietary changes
increase
Alzheimer's disease rates
-
15-20 years
AD rates peak about 15-20 years after
#5
higher consumption of saturated and total fats
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as AD risk factors
#6
higher consumption of meat
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as AD risk factor
#7
higher consumption of ultraprocessed foods
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
identified as AD risk factor
#8
higher consumption of fruits
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#9
higher consumption of legumes
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#10
higher consumption of nuts
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#11
higher consumption of omega-3 fatty acids
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#12
higher consumption of vegetables
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#13
higher consumption of whole grains
decrease
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
lower risk of AD
#14
diet-induced factors
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#15
inflammation
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#16
insulin resistance
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#17
oxidative stress
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#18
elevated homocysteine
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#19
dietary advanced glycation end products
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#20
trimethylamine N-oxide
increase
Alzheimer's disease
-
-
associated with a significant risk of AD
#21
a low-animal product diet with plenty of anti-inflammatory, low-glycemic load foods
decrease
Alzheimer's disease risk
people willing and able
-
may be helpful
#22
Abstract

Diet is an important nonpharmacological risk-modifying factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). The approaches used here to assess diet's role in the risk of AD include multi-country ecological studies, prospective and cross-sectional observational studies, and laboratory studies. Ecological studies have identified fat, meat, and obesity from high-energy diets as important risk factors for AD and reported that AD rates peak about 15-20 years after national dietary changes. Observational studies have compared the Western dietary pattern with those of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH), Mediterranean (MedDi), and Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diets. Those studies identified AD risk factors including higher consumption of saturated and total fats, meat, and ultraprocessed foods and a lower risk of AD with higher consumption of fruits, legumes, nuts, omega-3 fatty acids, vegetables, and whole grains. Diet-induced factors associated with a significant risk of AD include inflammation, insulin resistance, oxidative stress, elevated homocysteine, dietary advanced glycation end products, and trimethylamine N-oxide. The molecular mechanisms by which dietary bioactive components and specific foods affect risk of AD are discussed. Given most countries' entrenched food supply systems, the upward trends of AD rates would be hard to reverse. However, for people willing and able, a low-animal product diet with plenty of anti-inflammatory, low-glycemic load foods may be helpful.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansAlzheimer DiseaseCross-Sectional StudiesProspective StudiesDietRisk Factors
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations24
Citations/Year12.0
Relative Citation Ratio4.61
NIH Percentile92.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score3.01
Normalized Score0.66