Wednesday October 15, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- Want to
prevent brain diseases like Alzheimer's disease or simply slow age-related
mental decline?
Forget about taking B
vitamins like B6, B12 and folate, according to one study.
Instead reduce your intake of calories,
according to another study.
B vitamins have been known to be beneficial to the brain.
But if you have already got a brain disease like Alzheimer's, then taking B
vitamin supplements does not seem to help you, according to a study in the Oct.
15 issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.
The study found people who had had Alzheimer's disease
and then took high doses of B vitamins simply did not experience
beneficial
effect onthe primary cognitive measure.Paul S. Aisen coauthor of the study at the
University of
California
in San Diego, California warned that people should not count on taking
high doses of B vitamins to slow mental decline.
A review published in the Nov 2008 issue of Current
Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care suggests, however, that by
restricting your intake of calories, a practice known as caloric restriction,
you may not have to contract Alzheimer's disease in the first place.
The review led by Gillette-Guyonnet S and Vellas B. from
aGérontopôle Toulouse, France bInserm, U558, Toulouse, France says caloric
restriction does not just extend lifespan, but may benefit brain functioning as
well.
The authors say in their report that "it has been
proven that caloric restriction prevents age-related neuronal damage.”
The only thing that remians uncertain is how
caloric restriction affects brain functions.
They predict there might be a possibility in the future that
this dietary practice will be proposed to prevent or even to treat
neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease.
The idea is not too far-fetching. Caloric restriction
could help cognitive capability through "anti-inflammatory mechanisms,
reduction of neural oxidative stress, promotion of synaptic plasticity,
induction of various stress and neurotrophic/neuroprotective factors,"
according to the authors.
It is known for a fact at least that caloric restriction
may prevent beta-amyloid neuropathology in Alzheimer transgenic models.
Reading the reports of these two studies, what are we
going to do with the risk of brain diseases like Alzheimer's or Parkinson's
disease?
We now know that next time we go to some China Buffet,
we'd better not eat too much because caloric restriction is known to extend out
lifespan, probably by protecting against Alzheimer's and many other chronic
diseases.
But we should not forget taking B vitamins regardless of
the Aisen study because these vitamins are beneficial to the brain.
The Aisen study was not meant to explain why B vitamins
folic acid, B6 and B12 do not work for Alzheimer’s patients. It’s possible that
patients did not take the vitamin supplements properly or simply they could not
absorb these nutrients.
Early studies have found that deficiency of these
vitamins were linked to high risk of Alzheimer’s, suggesting that these
patients were likely unable to absorb these vitamins properly.
Alzheimer’s disease affects an estimated 4.5 million
Americans, according to the U.S. National Institutes of Health. About 5 percent
of people ages 65 to 74 and almost half of those ages 85 suffer the disease.
There is no cure for Alzheimer’s. People with the disease
may experience memory loss, difficulty to trouble remembering recent events,
activities, or the names of familiar people or things.
This disease does not result from normal
aging.
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