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News--
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Eating plenty of fish, nuts and oil-based salad dressings that contain polyunsaturated fatty acids cuts the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, researchers said on Monday.
A seven-year study of 815 nursing home residents -- 131 of whom developed the
brain-robbing disease -- found those who reported eating fish at least once a
week had a 60 percent lower risk of Alzheimer's compared to those who rarely or
never ate fish.
Researcher Martha Clare Morris of Rush-Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center
in Chicago, writing in The Archives of Neurology journal, credited
polyunsaturated fatty acids found in fish, nuts and oily dressings for the
protective effect. She said the fatty acids are also found in the membranes of
brain cells, and may protect them from the ravages of Alzheimer's.
Previous studies have cited a healthy diet rich in antioxidants -- such as
those found in red wine and various fruits and vegetables -- may stave off
Alzheimer's, though the root cause of the brain-clogging plaque that afflicts an
estimated 12 million people globally remains unknown.
In an accompanying editorial, Robert Friedland of Case Western Reserve
University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio, said a healthy diet containing
fish could help ward off a host of ailments, not just Alzheimer's, though he
warned of toxins such as mercury tainting some fish.
"A high antioxidant/low saturated fat diet pattern with a greater amount of
fish, chicken, fruits, and vegetables and less red meat and dairy products is
likely to lower the risk of Alzheimer's disease, as well as that for heart
disease and stroke," Friedland wrote. |
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