Researchers followed almost 28,000 men for two decades starting when
they were 51 years old, on average. Every four years, participants
answered questionnaires about their consumption of fruits,
vegetables and other foods. They also took tests of thinking and
memory skills when they were 73 years old, on average.
Based on those test results, researchers found that by the time they
were in their later 70s, men who had regularly eaten the most
vegetables over the previous decades were 17 percent less likely to
have moderate cognitive problems and 34 percent less likely to have
more extensive cognitive deficits than men whose diets contained the
least produce.
Fruit consumption, overall, didn't appear to influence the risk of
moderate cognitive problems, but men who drank more orange juice
were 47 percent less likely to have extensive cognitive deficits
than men who drank the least, the researchers note in the journal
Neurology.
"Long-term intake of vegetables (e.g., green leafy, dark orange and
red vegetables), fruit (e.g. berry fruits) and fruit juice (e.g.
orange juice) may be beneficial for late-life subjective cognitive
function among U.S. men," lead study author Changzheng Yuan of the
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston said in an
email.
Men should still go easy on the orange juice, however.
"The protective role of regular consumption of fruit juice was
mainly observed among the oldest men," Yuan said.
"Since fruit juice is usually high in calories from concentrated
fruit sugars, it's generally best to consume no more than a small
glass (four to six ounces) per day," Yuan added.
To assess the impact of eating habits in middle age on cognitive
function later in life, researchers administered questionnaires
designed to measure memory and reasoning skills.
Among other things, they asked whether men had trouble remembering
things like recent events or items on shopping lists; whether they
had trouble following instructions or keeping track of plots on
television shows; and whether they got lost on familiar streets.
In these tests, 55 percent of the participants had good thinking and
memory skills, 38 percent had moderate skills and 7 percent had poor
thinking and memory skills.
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Researchers sorted participants into five groups based on their
fruit and vegetable consumption. The group with the highest
vegetable consumption ate about six servings per day, compared to
about two servings for the group with the lowest intake. For fruits,
the top group ate about three servings per day, compared to half a
serving in the bottom group.
A serving of fruit is considered one cup of fruit or a half-cup of
fruit juice. A serving of vegetables is considered one cup of raw
vegetables or two cups of leafy greens.
Overall, 6.6 percent of men who ate the most vegetables developed
poor cognitive function, compared with 7.9 percent of men who ate
the least.
And 6.9 percent of men who drank orange juice every day developed
poor cognitive function, compared with 8.4 percent of men who drank
orange juice less than once a month.
The study wasn't designed to prove whether or how fruit or vegetable
consumption directly impacts memory loss. Researchers also lacked
data on participants' memory and thinking skills before the tests
and couldn't assess how diet might have influenced changes over
time.
"Fruits and vegetables are rich in vitamins and nutrients, including
antioxidants, that can help protect the brain from oxidative stress
and preserve healthy vascular function that is important for
cognitive health," said Hannah Gardener, a researcher with the
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
"Fruit and vegetable consumption may be a piece of the puzzle to
maintaining cognitive health and should be viewed in conjunction
with other behaviors believed to support cognitive health, such as
overall adherence to a Mediterranean diet, physical activity,
healthy sleep, medication adherence, nonsmoking, mental stimulation
and education," Gardener, who wasn't involved in the study, said by
email.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2R8Xhnq Neurology, online November 21, 2018.
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