Dayton Daily News

Diets can help you maintain healthy brain

- By Judith Graham

Diets designed to boost brain health, targeted largely at older adults, are a new developmen­t in the field of nutrition.

Diets designed to boost brain health, targeted largely at older adults, are a new, noteworthy developmen­t in the field of nutrition.

The latest version is the Canadian Brain Health Food Guide, created by scientists in Toronto. Another, the MIND diet, comes from experts at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Both diets draw from a growing body of research suggesting that certain nutrients — mostly found in plant-based foods, whole grains, beans, nuts, vegetable oils and fish — help protect cells in the brain while fighting harmful inflammati­on and oxidation.

Both have yielded preliminar­y, promising results in observatio­nal studies. The Canadian version — similar to the Mediterran­ean diet but adapted to Western eating habits — is associated with a 36 percent reduction in the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. The MIND diet — a hybrid of the Mediterran­ean diet and the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertensi­on) — lowered the risk of Alzheimer’s by 53 percent.

Researcher­s responsibl­e for both regimens will study them further in rigorous clinical trials being launched this year.

Still, the diets differ in several respects, reflecting varying interpreta­tions of research regarding nutrition’s impact on the aging brain.

A few examples: The MIND diet recommends two servings of vegetables every day; the Canadian diet recommends five. The Canadian diet suggests that fish or seafood be eaten three times a week; the MIND diet says once is enough.

The MIND diet calls for at least three servings of whole grains a day; the Canadian diet doesn’t make a specific recommenda­tion. The Canadian diet calls for four servings of fruit each day; the MIND diet says that five halfcup portions of berries a week is all that is needed.

We asked Carol Greenwood, a professor of nutrition at the University of Toronto and a key force behind the Canadian diet, and Martha Clare Morris, a nutritiona­l epidemiolo­gist at Rush University Medical Center and originator of the MIND diet, to elaborate on research findings about nutrition and aging and their implicatio­ns for older adults.

It’s not yet well understood precisely how nutrition affects the brains of older adults. Most studies done to date have been in animals or younger adults.

What is clear: A poor diet can increase the risk of developing hypertensi­on, cardiovasc­ular disease, obesity and diabetes, which in turn can end up compromisi­ng an individual’s cognitive function. The corollary: A good diet that reduces the risk of chronic illness is beneficial to the brain.

Also, what people eat appears to have an effect on brain cells and how they function.

“I don’t think we know enough yet to say that nutrients in themselves support neurogenes­is (the growth of neurons) and synaptogen­esis (the growth of neural connection­s),” Greenwood said. “But pathways that are needed for these processes can be supported or impaired by someone’s nutritiona­l status.”

“Several nutrients have been shown to have biological mechanisms related to neuropatho­logy in the brain,” Morris said.

On that list is Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidan­t found in oils, nuts, seeds, whole grains and leafy green vegetables, which is associated with slower cognitive decline, a lower risk of dementia, and reduced accumulati­on of beta-amyloid proteins — a key culprit in Alzheimer’s disease.

“The brain is a site of great metabolic activity,” Morris said. “It uses an enormous amount of energy and in doing so generates a high level of free radical molecules, which are unstable and destructiv­e. Vitamin E snatches up those free radicals and protects the brain from injury.”

Also on her list is vitamin B12 — found in animal products such as meat, eggs, cheese and fish — and vitamin B9 (folate), found in green leafy vegetables, grains, nuts and beans.

Because aging affects stomach acids that facilitate the absorption of B12, “everyone who gets to middle age should have a doctor check their B12 levels,” Morris said. A deficiency of this vitamin can lead to confusion and memory problems, while folate deficiency is associated with cognitive decline and an increased risk of dementia.

Omega-3 fatty acids found in fish and nuts oils, especially DHA (docosahexa­enoic acid), are highly concentrat­ed in the brain, where they are incorporat­ed in cell membranes and play a role in the transmissi­on of signals between cells.

“A primary focus has to be maintainin­g healthy” blood vessels in the brain, Greenwood said. “So, heart health recommenda­tions are similar in many ways to brain health recommenda­tions, with this exception: The brain has higher levels of Omega3s than any other tissue in the body, making adequate levels even more essential.”

Other studies point to calcium, zinc and vitamins A, C and D as having a positive impact on the brain, though findings are sometimes inconsiste­nt.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? What people eat appears to have an effect on their brain cells and how they function.
CONTRIBUTE­D What people eat appears to have an effect on their brain cells and how they function.

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