Nutrition

Nutritional Pearls: Could The Mediterranean Diet Help Prevent Dementia?

Thomas is a 65-year-old man who is experiencing the early signs of dementia. He asks if there are any simple lifestyle changes he can make that will improve his cognition and prevent further decline.

How do you advise your patient?
(Answer and discussion on next page)



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Answer: In older patients, a Mediterranean diet supplemented with olive oil or nuts is associated with improved cognitive function.

People are living longer, and that means more and more people are experiencing what is known as "age-related cognitive decline," or more colloquially, dementia. That doesn't just affect those who have dementia, of course—those with aging parents will know the personal and financial burden that comes with the effects of age, even in those who do not have dementia. Unfortunately, there are no medications (yet) to treat this fairly normal consequence of age.

Just because it's "normal" doesn't mean we shouldn't try to find ways to avoid it, however. Dementia is thought to be related to the effects of oxidative stress on the brain, so it's reasonable to suppose that foods high in antioxidants might help counter that oxidative stress, thereby reducing or eliminating one of the possible causes of dementia.
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PREDIMED (Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea, or Prevention with a Mediterranean Diet) is a large-scale, prospective randomized clinical trial performed in Spain between 2003 and 2009. Over 8000 men and women between the ages of 55 and 80 with an increased risk of heart disease (but no active heart disease) were randomly assigned to one of 3 diets: a Mediterranean diet supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil, a Mediterranean diet supplemented with mixed nuts, or a low-fat control diet.

In the most recently published article based on the PREDIMED trial, individuals who decreased their intake of sodium to <300 mg of sodium per day were 48% less likely to die from any cause. In another study, individuals who consumed the most fiber, especially fiber from fruit, were 37% less likely to die from any cause. In a third study, those in the 2 Mediterranean diet groups were 30% less likely to develop diabetes than those on a low-fat diet—without losing weight.

The Research

For today's article the researchers were able to administer standard cognitive tests to 334 men and women at both the start of the study and again at the end of the study—an average of 4 years later.1 These tests measured overall cognitive function, different types of memory function, attention, cognitive flexibility, and reaction time, and from those tests 3 composite scores were created for each participant: frontal cognition, global cognition, and memory.

The Results

While the participants in each of the 3 diet groups scored about the same at the start of the study, those in the olive oil group actually improved their scores in one specific test involving episodic memory as compared to the control group. The scores for reaction time worsened for all 3 groups—but least in the olive oil group.

In terms of the 3 composite scores, those in the mixed nuts group improved their memory composite "significantly" as compared to the control group, while the olive oil group improved its score in their frontal and global cognition composites.

The authors noted that the changes in the composite scores were very similar for both of the Mediterranean diet arms of the study, suggesting that it's not the olive oil or the mixed nuts alone that are responsible for the diets' protective effects. While this is a smaller study, it's significant in that this was a prospective, randomized controlled trial—the gold standard of clinical research.

What’s the Take-Home?

Living longer and living healthier is a lot more fun if you can eat great food—and a Mediterranean Diet offers all three.

Reference:

1. Valls-Pedret C, Sala-Vila A, Serra-Mir M, et al. Mediterranean diet and age-related cognitive decline: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Intern Med 2015;175(7):1094-1103.