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Juices
may reduce
Alzheimer’s disease risk
Newswise — In a large epidemiological
study, researchers found that people who drank three or more
servings of fruit and vegetable juices per week had a 76 percent
lower risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease than those who drank
juice less than once per week.
The study by Qi Dai, M.D., Ph.D.,
assistant professor of Medicine, and colleagues appears in the
September issue of The American Journal of Medicine.
The researchers followed a subset
of subjects from a large cross-cultural study of dementia, called
the Ni-Hon-Sea Project, which investigated Alzheimer’s disease and
vascular dementia in older Japanese populations living in Japan,
Hawaii and Seattle, Wash.
For the current study,
called the Kame Project, the researchers identified 1,836
dementia-free subjects in the Seattle population and
collected information on their dietary consumption of fruit
and vegetable juices. They then assessed cognitive function
every two years for up to 10 years.
After controlling for possible
confounding factors like smoking, education, physical activity and
fat intake, the researchers found that those who reported drinking
juices three or more times per week were 76 percent less likely to
develop signs of Alzheimer’s disease than those who drank less than
one serving per week.
The benefit appeared
particularly enhanced in subjects who carry the apolipoprotein E ?-4 allele, a
genetic marker linked to late-onset Alzheimer’s disease – the most
common form of the disease, which typically occurs after the age of
65.
The researchers chose to study
this group because of the low incidence rate of Alzheimer’s disease
in the Japanese population. However, the incidence of Alzheimer’s in
Japanese people living in the United States is higher, approaching
the incidence rates in Americans. This pointed to environmental
factors like diet and lifestyle as important contributors to disease
risk.
Originally, researchers suspected
that high intakes of antioxidant vitamins (vitamins C, E and
?-carotene) might provide some protection against Alzheimer’s
disease, but recent clinical studies have not supported this
hypothesis.
“We thought that the underlying
component may not be vitamins, that there was maybe something else,”
Dai said.
Dai began to suspect that another
class of antioxidant chemicals, known as polyphenols, could play a
role. Polyphenols are non-vitamin antioxidants common in the diet
and particularly abundant in teas, juices and wines. Most
polyphenols exist primarily in the skins and peels of fruits and
vegetables. Recent studies have shown that polyphenols (like
resveratrol in wine) extend maximum lifespan by 59 percent and delay
age-dependent decay of cognitive performance in animal models.
“Also, animal studies and cell
culture studies confirmed that some polyphenols from juices showed a
stronger neuroprotective effect than antioxidant vitamins. So we are
now looking at polyphenols,” Dai said.
The next step, said Dai, is to
test the subjects’ blood samples to see if elevated levels of
polyphenols are related to the reduced risk of cognitive decline and
Alzheimer’s disease. This would provide further evidence of the role
of juice polyphenols in Alzheimer’s disease risk. It also may point
to the types of juice that would be most beneficial.
“We don’t know if it is a specific
type of juice (that reduces risk). That information was not
collected in the current study,” said Dai. “But we can use plasma to
narrow down the kinds of juices.”
However promising the study
results appear, Dai cautioned, it’s important that the general
public not jump the gun regarding the value of juice as a preventive
measure for Alzheimer’s disease.
“A few years ago, hormone
replacement therapy, NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs)
and antioxidant vitamins showed promise (in preventing or slowing
Alzheimer’s disease), but recent clinical trials indicate that they
do not,” Dai said. “More study, I think, is needed.”
This research was supported by
grants from the National Institutes of Health. James C. Jackson,
Psy.D., research assistant professor of Medicine and Psychiatry at
Vanderbilt University Medical Center; Amy R. Borenstein, Ph.D., and
Yougui Wu, Ph.D., from the University of South Florida; and Eric B.
Larson, M.D., Ph.D., of the Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound
were co-authors on the study.