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Mediterranean
Diet may help Alzheimer’s patients live
longer
Newswise — A
Mediterranean diet may help people with
Alzheimer’s disease live longer than
patients who eat a more traditional Western
diet. The study is published in the
September 11, 2007, issue of Neurology, the
medical journal of the American Academy of
Neurology.
The study followed 192
people with Alzheimer’s disease in New York
for an average of four and a half years.
During that time, 85 of the people died.
Researchers found that those who most
closely followed a Mediterranean diet were
76 percent less likely to die during the
study period than those who followed the
diet the least.
“The more closely
people followed the Mediterranean diet, the
more they reduced their mortality,” said
study author Nikos Scarmeas, MD, MSc, of
Columbia University Medical Center in New
York, and member of the American Academy of
Neurology. “For example, Alzheimer’s
patients who adhered to the diet to a
moderate degree lived an average 1.3 years
longer than those people who least adhered
to the diet. And those Alzheimer’s patients
who followed the diet very religiously lived
an average four years longer.”
Previous research by Scarmeas and his
colleagues demonstrated that healthy people
who eat a Mediterranean diet lower their
risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.
Studies have also shown that healthy people
who follow a Mediterranean diet live longer
than those who eat a more traditional
Western diet, higher in saturated fat and
meats and lower in fruits and vegetables.
“New benefits of this
diet keep coming out,” said Scarmeas. “We
need to do more research to determine
whether eating a Mediterranean diet also
helps Alzheimer’s patients have slower rates
of cognitive decline, maintain their daily
living skills, and have a better quality of
life.”
The Mediterranean diet
includes a high intake of vegetables,
legumes, fruits, cereals, fish,
monounsaturated fatty acids; a low intake of
saturated fatty acids, dairy products, meat
and poultry; and a mild to moderate amount
of alcohol.
The study was supported
by grants from the National Institute on
Aging and the Taub Institute for Research on
Alzheimer’s Disease and the Aging Brain at
Columbia University.
The American Academy of
Neurology, an association of more than
20,000 neurologists and neuroscience
professionals, is dedicated to improving
patient care through education and research.
A neurologist is a doctor with specialized
training in diagnosing, treating and
managing disorders of the brain and nervous
system such as stroke, Alzheimer’s disease,
epilepsy, Parkinson’s disease, and multiple
sclerosis.
For more information
about the American Academy of Neurology,
visit
http://www.aan.com.
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