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Eating
foods rich in vitamin E associated with
lower dementia risk
July 2010--Consuming more vitamin E through the diet
appears to be associated with a lower risk
of dementia and Alzheimer's disease,
according to a report in the July issue of
Archives of Neurology, one of the
JAMA/Archives journals.
Oxidative stress—damage to the cells from oxygen
exposure—is thought to play a role in the
development of Alzheimer's disease,
according to background information in the
article. Experimental data suggest that
antioxidants, nutrients that help repair
this damage, may protect against the
degeneration of nervous system cells.
"Although clinical trials have shown no benefit of
antioxidant supplements for Alzheimer's
disease, the wider variety of antioxidants
in food sources is not well studied relative
to dementia risk; a few studies, with
varying lengths of follow-up, have yielded
inconsistent results," the authors write.
Elizabeth E. Devore, Sc.D., of Erasmus Medical Center,
Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and colleagues
assessed 5,395 participants 55 years and
older who did not have dementia between 1990
and 1993.
Participants underwent a home interview and two clinical
examinations at the beginning of the study,
and provided dietary information through a
two-step process involving a meal-based
checklist and a food questionnaire.
The researchers focused on four antioxidants: vitamin E,
vitamin C, beta carotene and flavonoids. The
major food sources of vitamin E were
margarine, sunflower oil, butter, cooking
fat, soybean oil and mayonnaise; vitamin C
came mainly from oranges, kiwi, grapefruit
juice, grapefruit, cauliflower, red bell
peppers and red cabbage; beta carotene, from
carrots, spinach, vegetable soup, endive and
tomato; and flavonoids from tea, onions,
apples and carrots.
Over an average of 9.6 years of follow-up, 465 participants
developed dementia; 365 of those were
diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. After
adjusting for other potentially related
factors, the one-third of individuals who
consumed the most vitamin E (a median or
midpoint of 18.5 milligrams per day) were 25
percent less likely to develop dementia than
the one-third of participants who consumed
the least (a median of 9 milligrams per
day). Dietary intake levels of vitamin C,
beta carotene and flavonoids were not
associated with dementia risk. Results were
similar when only the participants diagnosed
with Alzheimer's disease were assessed.
"The brain is a site of high metabolic activity, which
makes it vulnerable to oxidative damage, and
slow accumulation of such damage over a
lifetime may contribute to the development
of dementia," the authors write. "In
particular, when beta-amyloid (a hallmark of
pathologic Alzheimer's disease) accumulates
in the brain, an inflammatory response is
likely evoked that produces nitric oxide
radicals and downstream neurodegenerative
effects. Vitamin E is a powerful fat-soluble
antioxidant that may help to inhibit the
pathogenesis of dementia."
Future studies are needed to evaluate dietary intake of
antioxidants and dietary risks, including
different points at which consuming more
antioxidants might reduce risk, the authors
conclude.