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FEATURED NEWS
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Eat Your Greens, Boost Your Brain ( courtecy;-medicine net )
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People who eat leafy green vegetables every day may maintain a
sharper mind.
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By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter
HealthDay Reporter
WEDNESDAY, Dec. 20,
2017 (HealthDay News) -- People who eat leafy green vegetables every day may
maintain a sharper mind as they age, a new study suggests.
The researchers found
that, compared with people who rarely ate leafy greens, those who had at least
one serving a day showed slower brain aging. It was as if
they'd shaved 11 years off their age -- as far as their brain function was
concerned.
The findings,
published in the Dec. 20 online edition of the journal Neurology,
do not prove that greens, per se, slow down brain aging.
"You can't make
that kind of conclusion based on studies like this," said Keith Fargo,
director of scientific programs and outreach for the Alzheimer's Association.
Rather, the study results suggest an association between the two.
But the findings do
add to the bigger picture, Fargo said. He was not involved in the research.
There is growing
evidence of how important diet and other
lifestyle factors are to healthy brain aging, he said.
When it comes to food,
leafy green vegetables -- like spinach, kale and collard greens -- have stood
out from the pack, according to Martha Clare Morris, the lead researcher on the
study.
Her team wanted to dig
into the nutrients that might be involved, said Morris, a professor at Rush
University Medical Center, in Chicago.
The investigators
found that certain nutrients -- including vitamin K, folate
and lutein -- seemed to largely account for the link between leafy greens and
slower brain aging.
However, that does not
mean that people should skip the vegetables in favor of popping supplements, both
Morris and Fargo stressed.
Based on research so
far, Morris said, "it's really the food sources of these nutrients that
seem to be important."
Food provides a
complex balance of nutrients that is not replicated in a pill, she explained.
Plus, the array of foods in a person's diet matters. For example, Morris said, some
nutrients in leafy greens are better absorbed when eaten with fat -- like an
oil-based salad dressing.
The study involved 960
adults, aged 58 to 99, who answered questions about their diets and lifestyle.
The study participants were also given standard tests of memory and other
mental skills.
People in the top 20
percent for leafy green intake typically ate one serving a day. Morris said
that's just a cup of raw salad greens or a half-cup of cooked spinach, kale or
collards, for example.
On average, those
people showed a slower decline in mental skills, versus their peers who rarely
touched leafy greens.
The difference was
equivalent to 11 years of aging, Morris said.
"This doesn't
prove cause-and-effect," she acknowledged. "But you can't really go
wrong by adding leafy greens to your diet."
She also had some
advice on how to do it.
"There's a common
misconception that raw vegetables are always better," Morris noted. But
when it comes to fat-soluble nutrients, like vitamin E and
lutein, you'll get more "bang for your buck" if the vegetables are
cooked, she said.
Again, though, eating
those cooked greens with fat will boost absorption of the nutrients, she
explained.
Fargo agreed that no
one is going to go wrong by eating leafy greens, but he also urged people to
focus on their overall lifestyle.
In a 2015 review of
medical research, Fargo noted, the Alzheimer's Association found good
evidence that various lifestyle measures may help keep the aging brain healthy.
Those measures
include:
- Regular exercise.
- Not smoking.
- Maintaining a healthy weight.
- Keeping your cardiovascular system in good
condition (by controlling high blood pressure and diabetes, for
instance).
- Staying mentally engaged (by reading or learning new
skills, for example).
The Alzheimer's
Association also pinpointed healthy eating habits. One example is the Mediterranean diet --
high in vegetables, fish, whole grains and healthy unsaturated fat, and low in
sweets, red meat and processed foods.
"You don't want
to do just one of these things in isolation," Fargo said. "They
probably all work synergistically."
Clinical trials testing
the effects of diet and other lifestyle measures are already underway. Fargo
said the Alzheimer's Association is launching a U.S. trial, called POINTER,
that will test a combination of approaches -- including diet changes, exercise, and mental and social engagement
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