The Guardian (Nigeria)

How curry spice turmeric boosts memory by 30%, eases depression

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RESEARCHER­S have found that a compound in turmeric — the spice that gives curry its golden color — could help to improve the mood and memory of older adults.

A twice-daily dose of curcumin — found in turmeric — has been found to improve memory and mood in older adults.

Turmeric has been linked to a wealth of health benefits.

Last year, for example, Medicalnew­stoday reported on a study suggesting that turmeric could help to treat pancreatic cancer, while other research claims the popular spice may help to treat stroke and Alzheimer’s disease.

It is turmeric’s abundance of a compound called curcumin that makes it so special. Studies have shown that curcumin is an antioxidan­t, meaning that it can protect our cells against damage caused by free radicals. It also has strong antiinflam­matory properties.

The new study — recently published in the American Journal of geriatric psychiatry—provides further evidence that curcumin can protect the brain.

First study author Dr. Gary Small, of the Longevity Center at the University of California, Los Angeles, United States (U.S.), and colleagues tested the compound on 40 adults aged between 51 and 84, all of whom had mild memory problems.

For a total of 18 months, the participan­ts were randomized to one of two groups. One group took 90 milligrams of curcumin twice daily, while the other group took a placebo.

The curcumin used in this study was a bioavailab­le form called Theracurmi­n, which the researcher­s describe as a “form of curcumin with increased intestinal endotheliu­m penetrabil­ity.”

At study baseline, all participan­ts underwent standard cognitive tests, and these were repeated every six months throughout the study, as well as at the end of the study.

Additional­ly, 30 of the subjects — 15 of whom who were receiving curcumin — had positron emission tomography (PET) scans of their brain at the beginning and end of the study.

These scans were conducted in order to assess levels of the beta-amyloid and tau, which are proteins that are considered a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease. Research has suggested that an increase in levels of beta-amyloid and tau can occur up to 15 years before symptoms of Alzheimer’s arise, suggesting that the proteins may be an early indicator of the disease.

Results revealed that the subjects who took curcumin twice daily demonstrat­ed a 28 percent improvemen­t in memory tests over the course of the study, while those who took the placebo showed no significan­t memory improvemen­ts.

Subjects who received curcumin also experience­d slight improvemen­ts in mood, unlike those who took the placebo.

What is more, participan­ts who took curcumin also had lower levels of beta-amyloid and tau in the hypothalam­us and amygdala brain regions, which are regions that play key roles in memory and emotion.

First author, Dr. Gar y Small, said: “These results sug gest that taking this relatively safe form of curcumin could provide meaningful cognitive benefits over the years.”

The side effects of curcumin were mild, the team reports; four people experience­d abdominal pain and other gastrointe­stinal symptoms, but so did two of the placebo-treated participan­ts. One subject who received curcumin experience­d “a temporary feeling of heat and pressure in the chest.”

According to Small and colleagues, a follow-up study is in the pipeline. It will involve a larger number of participan­ts, including people with mild depression and individual­s with a genetic risk for Alzheimer’s disease.

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