| Americans who ate a Mediterranean diet -
lots of fruits, vegetables, legumes, cereals, some fish
and alcohol, and little dairy and meat - had a reduced
risk for Alzheimer's disease as they aged. These
findings are published in the April issue of Annals of
Neurology, a journal published by John Wiley & Sons. The
article is also available online via Wiley Interscience
(interscience.wiley.com). Experts theorize that diet
may play a role in the development of Alzheimer's
disease but epidemiological data on diet and Alzheimer's
is conflicting and while individual foods and nutrients
have been previously studied, general dietary patterns
have not. To address this paucity of data, researchers
led by Nikolaos Scarmeas of Columbia University Medical
Center, designed a prospective community-based study of
2,258 non-demented people in New York City. The study
was funded by the NIH/NIA.
The subjects were part of the Washington Heights-Inwood
Columbia Aging project, and for each, the researchers
gathered medical and neurological history, did a
standardized physical and neurological exam, and
conducted an in-person interview to assess health and
neuropsychological function. This information was used
to diagnose a presence or absence of dementia. Subjects
were reassessed approximately every 18 months for an
average of 4 years.
The researchers also obtained dietary data from each
subject using a semi-quantitative food frequency
questionnaire. They determined a Mediterranean
Diet score (0-9) based on a previously
described method. During the course of the study, 262
members of the study population were diagnosed with
Alzheimer's disease.
"Higher adherence to the Mediterranean diet
was associated with significantly lower risk of
developing Alzheimer's disease," the authors report. For
each additional point to Mediterranean diet scores
(indicating increased adherence to the diet),
Alzheimer's risk dropped by 9 to 10 percent. Compared
with the subjects in the least adherent group that
adhered to a Mediterranean diet the least, subjects in
the middle tertile had 15 to 21 percent lower risk of
developing Alzheimer's disease, and those in the highest
tertile had a 39 to 40 percent lower risk, suggesting a
significant dose response effect. The association
remained significant even after adjusting for potential
confounders such as age, gender, ethnicity, education,
caloric intake, BMI, smoking and comorbid conditions.
One possible limitation of this study is the
inaccurate measurement of subjects' diets, though the
researchers used a previously developed and tested
dietary assessment, and suggest that mismeasurements may
have actually caused an underestimation of the
association. Also, disease misclassification is a
possible limitation, though the diagnosis was made by
experienced practitioners and was based on comprehensive
assessment and standard criteria. Subtle changes in
dietary habits as a result of early Alzheimer's
symptoms, although another potential limitation, did not
seem to be the case since adherence to the Mediterranean
diet was found to be quite stable.
"We conclude that higher adherence to the
Mediterranean diet is associated with a reduction in
risk for Alzheimer's disease," they say. In addition,
they say that the beneficial effects of the
Mediterranean diet for non-neurological conditions have
been previously shown to be generalizable to different
populations, and that the current study provided the
opportunity to examine the effect of this diet for a
neurological disease in a multiethnic community in the
U.S.
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Mediterranean Diet
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