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A 'Heart
Healthy' Diet and ongoing, moderate physical
activity may protect against Cognitive
Decline as we age
VIENNA, July 14 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ --
Eating a "heart healthy" diet and
maintaining or increasing participation in
moderate physical activity may help preserve
our memory and thinking abilities as we age,
according to new research reported today at
the Alzheimer's Association 2009
International Conference on Alzheimer's
Disease (ICAD 2009) in Vienna.
"We can't do anything about aging or family
history, but research continues to show us
that there are lifestyle decisions we all
can make to keep our brains healthier, and
that also may lower our risk of memory
decline as we age," said William Thies, PhD,
Chief Medical & Scientific Officer at the
Alzheimer's Association.
Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension
(DASH) Eating Pattern May Reduce Age-Related
Cognitive Decline
The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension
(DASH) diet is often recommended by
physicians to people with high blood
pressure or pre-hypertension. The DASH diet
eating plan has been proven to lower blood
pressure in studies sponsored by the
National Institutes of Health. High blood
pressure is considered a risk factor for
Alzheimer's and dementia.
Heidi Wengreen, RD, PhD, Assistant Professor
of Nutrition at UtahStateUniversity, and
colleagues examined associations between how
closely people adhered to the DASH diet and
risk of cognitive decline and dementia among
older participants in the Cache County Study
on Memory, Health and Aging.
In 1995, 3,831 study participants 65 years
of age or older completed a survey that
included a food frequency questionnaire and
cognitive assessment. Cognitive function was
checked again during four assessments over
11 years using the ModifiedMini-MentalState
examination (3MS), which is graded on a 100
point scale. A DASH diet adherence score was
created based on consumption levels of nine
food-group/nutrient components -- fruit,
vegetables, nut/legumes, whole grains,
low-fat dairy, sodium, sweets, non-fish
meat, and fish. Participants were ranked by
DASH score into five groups, or quintiles.
The researchers found that higher DASH
scores were associated with higher scores
for cognitive functioning at the beginning
of the study and over time. Those in the
highest quintile scored 1.42 points higher
at baseline and 1.81 points higher after 11
years on the 3MS than did those in the
lowest quintile of the DASH score (p-values
<0.001).
They also found that four of the nine
food-group/nutrient components used to
create the DASH score were independently
associated with 3MS scores -- vegetables,
whole grains, low-fat dairy, nut/legumes.
The scientists created a diet adherence
score based on just these four components
which they then tested for association with
changes in cognitive abilities on the 3MS.
Those in the highest quintile scored 1.72
points higher at baseline and 3.73 points
higher after 11 years than did those in the
lowest quintile of the four-component score
(p-values <0.001).
"Our results suggest that including whole
grains, vegetables, low-fat dairy foods, and
nuts in one's diet may offer benefits for
cognition in late life," Wengreen said.
"However, we need more research before we
can confidently say how much of these foods
to include in your diet to experience some
benefit."
Maintaining or Increasing Activity Levels May Slow Cognitive Decline in
Elderly
Studies have found that older adults who are
physically active may experience slower
rates of cognitive decline. Less is known
about the impact of changes in physical
activity levels on rate of cognitive
decline.
Deborah E. Barnes, PhD, MPH, Assistant
Professor of Psychiatry at the University of
California, San Francisco, and a geriatrics
researcher at the San Francisco VA Medical
Center, and colleagues studied changes in
levels of both physical activity and
cognitive function over seven years in 3,075
white and black elders aged 70-79 years in
the Health, Aging and Body Composition
Study. Physical activity was assessed based
on self-reported number of minutes walked
per week at the beginning of the study and
after two, four, and seven years of
follow-up. Participants were classified at
each time point as sedentary (0 minutes per
week), low (less than 150 minutes per week)
or high (150 minutes per week or more).
Changes over time were classified as
consistently sedentary, maintaining (low or
high), decreasing, or
increasing/fluctuating. Cognitive function
was assessed using the 3MS.
The researchers found that 21% of study
participants were consistently sedentary,
12% maintained their activity levels, 26%
had declining levels, and 41% had increasing
or fluctuating levels. After adjustment for
age, sex, race, education, study site,
diabetes, hypertension, smoking, alcohol
consumption and baseline 3MS score, they
found that the mean rate of decline in 3MS
scores was 0.62 points/year in those who
were consistently sedentary, 0.54
points/year (p=0.30) in those with declining
activity levels, 0.44 points/year (p=0.01)
in those with increasing/fluctuating
activity levels, and 0.40 points/year
(p=0.04) in those who maintained their
activity levels.
"We found that older adults who were
sedentary throughout the study had the
lowest levels of cognitive function at the
beginning and experienced the fastest rate
of cognitive decline," Barnes said.
"Cognitive decline also was faster in those
whose physical activity levels consistently
declined during the study period."
According to the researchers, sedentary
elders who began new aerobic exercise
programs experienced improvements in
cognitive function, especially the ability
to process complex information quickly.
"Sedentary individuals should be encouraged
to engage in physical activity at least
occasionally," Barnes said. "People who are
currently active should be encouraged to
maintain or increase their activity levels."
Moderate Long-Term Physical Activity May Improve Late Life Cognition;
Long-Term Strenuous Activity May Increase
Risk of Cognitive Impairment
Long-term strenuous physical activity has
been shown to decrease lifetime exposure to
ovarian hormones in women and has been found
to play a protective role against breast
cancer. However reduction in ovarian hormone
exposure has been associated with increased
risk of cognitive impairment. At the same
time, long-term physical activity is
associated with improved cognition but the
intensity required to preserve cognition is
not known.
Mary C. Tierney, PhD, CPsych, Professor of
Family and Community Medicine at the
University of Toronto, and Senior Scientist
and Director, Geriatric Research Unit, Brain
Sciences Program at Sunnybrook Health
Sciences Centre, and colleagues sought to
examine the associations between both
long-term strenuous and moderate activity
levels and cognition in recently
postmenopausal women.
Study participants were 90 women aged 50-63
years, one to 10 years post natural
menopause, with no history of breast cancer,
HRT use, psychiatric disorder, dementia or
other neurological condition. Participants
gave details on the amount of their
strenuous and moderate physical recreational
activities from high school to menopause.
Eight memory and brain function tests were
administered to all participants.
After adjusting for age, education,
reproductive years, cigarette smoking,
alcohol consumption, parity, and periods of
amenorrhea, the researchers found that
long-term strenuous activity was
consistently associated with poorer
performance on all eight of the tests; with
statistically significant results on tests
of semantic memory, working memory, delayed
verbal recall, and sustained attention (p
<0.05). Moderate physical activity was
consistently associated with better
performance on all eight of the tests, with
statistically significant results on
cognitive flexibility, working memory, and
sustained attention (p <0.05).
"Our results suggest that long-term
strenuous activity may increase the risk of
cognitive impairment in recently
postmenopausal women," Tierney said. "On the
other hand, moderate long-term physical
activity may improve later life cognition.
These preliminary findings have important
implications for women's health and support
the need for large-scale studies including
both women and men."
Alzheimer's Risk Gene May Reduce Benefits of Physical Activity to
Cognitive Ability
While the relationship of physical activity
with cognitive performance as we age is a
subject of considerable research, much less
is known about how this relationship is
impacted by the Alzheimer's risk gene
Apolipoprotein E (APOE). The APOE gene comes
in three types, or alleles, known as e2, e3,
and e4. Each person gets one type of APOE
from each parent, making the possible
combinations: e2/e2, e2/e3, e2/e4, e3/e3,
e3/e4, e4/e4. Having two copies of e4
conveys the highest risk for Alzheimer's;
having one e4 also raises one's risk. E3 is
the most common type. E2, though rare, is
thought to be protective.
Thomas Obisesan, MD, MPH, FAAFP, Chief of
the Division of Geriatrics at
HowardUniversityHospital and professor of
medicine at Howard University College of
Medicine, Washington, D.C., and colleagues
examined this issue using data from The
Third National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III, 1988-1994).
They identified 1,799 men and women age 60
and older who had data on levels of
aerobic-related physical activity (AR-PA),
such as walking, jogging, bicycling or
swimming; mental status test scores; and
APOE genotype.
In their analysis, the researchers found
that physical activity was associated with
enhanced cognitive function, and that this
relationship was differentially influenced
by the person's APOE genotype: non-E4
carriers and people with one copy of E4
performed better than people with two copies
of E4. After adjusting for age, ethnicity,
severe chronic medical illness, lean body
mass, and education, aerobic physical
activity continued to show a statistically
significant association with cognitive
function in non-E4 carriers but not in
people with E4 (any combination)
"In our nationally representative sample,
persons who reported higher levels of
aerobic physical activity had better memory
than those who reported no such activity.
This was especially true in those people who
didn't have the APOE-e4 Alzheimer's risk
gene," Obisesan said.
"Because physical activity is a low-cost,
low-risk, readily available intervention, it
may prove to be an important public health
strategy to reduce or prevent memory loss
and other symptoms of mental decline in the
elderly. Future rigorous clinical trials are
needed to confirm these findings," Obisesan
added.
About ICAD 2009
The 2009 Alzheimer's Association
International Conference on Alzheimer's
Disease (ICAD 2009) brings together more
than 3,000 researchers from 70 countries to
share groundbreaking research and
information on the cause, diagnosis,
treatment and prevention of Alzheimer's
disease and related disorders. As a part of
the Association's research program, ICAD
2009 serves as a catalyst for generating new
knowledge about dementia and fostering a
vital, collegial research community. ICAD
2009 will be held in Vienna, Austria at
Messe Wien Exhibition and CongressCenter
from July 11-16.
About the Alzheimer's Association
The Alzheimer's Association is the leading
voluntary health organization in Alzheimer
care, support and research. Our mission is
to eliminate Alzheimer's disease through the
advancement of research, to provide and
enhance care and support for all affected,
and to reduce the risk of dementia through
the promotion of brain health. Our vision is
a world without Alzheimer's. For more
information, visit www.alz.org.
-
Heidi Wengreen, et al -- DASH diet adherence scores
and cognitive decline and dementia among
aging men and women: CacheCounty study
of Memory Health and Aging (Funders:
National Institute on Aging, Utah State
University Agriculture Experiment
Station)
-
Deborah Barnes, et al - The impact of changes in
physical activity levels on rate of
cognitive decline in a biracial cohort
of non-demented elders (Funder: National
Institutes of Health)
-
Mary Tierney, et al - Intensity of long-term physical
activity and later life cognition in
postmenopausal women (Funders: Women's
Health Student Experience, Women's
College Hospital, University of Toronto;
Geriatric Research Unit, Sunnybrook
Health Sciences Centre)
-
Thomas Obisesan, et al -Aerobic-related physical
activity interacting with apolipoprotein
E genotypes, is associated with better
cognitive function in a nationally
representative sample: The Third
National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES III) (Funder:
National Institutes of Health)
All materials to be presented at the 2009
Alzheimer's Association International
Conference on Alzheimer's Disease (ICAD
2009) are embargoed for publication and
broadcast until the date and time of
presentation at the International Conference
on Alzheimer's Disease, unless the
Alzheimer's Association provides written
notice of change of embargo date/time in
advance.
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