The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

3 Ingredients In Your Diet That Can Stop Dementia - Walla! health

2022-05-11T05:48:08.216Z


You already know that vegetables and fruits have a great effect on your health, but a new study has found that some can also delay dementia. So what should you add to your daily menu?


3 Ingredients In Your Diet That Can Stop Dementia

You already know that vegetables and fruits have a great effect on your health, but a new study has found that some can also delay dementia.

So what should you add to your daily menu?

Walla!

health

11/05/2022

Wednesday, 11 May 2022, 06:04 Updated: 08:33

  • Share on Facebook

  • Share on WhatsApp

  • Share on Twitter

  • Share on Email

  • Share on general

  • Comments

    Comments

Our diet plays an essential role in the way our lives will look healthily and mentally, and it pertains to almost every area of ​​its life.

Now a new study has found that people with high levels of three major antioxidants in their blood are less likely to develop dementia.

Two of the compounds - lutein and saxanthin - are abundant in vegetables and green leaves, as well as in peas and spinach.

Oranges and papaya are the main sources of the third ingredient - beta cryptoxanthin.

More on Walla!

13 Particularly compelling reasons to start eating greens

To the full article

The study's lead researcher, Dr. Mae Bydon, an aging expert from the National Institutes of Health in the United States, said that expanding people's cognitive functioning is an important challenge to public health.

"Antioxidants may help protect the brain from oxidative stress, which can damage cells," she said.

But she added that more research is needed to test whether antioxidants really "can help protect the brain from dementia."

Protecting the brain from dementia?

Pea and spinach quiche (Photo: Walla !, Matan Chopin)

In a study published in the journal Neurology, Dr. Bydon and colleagues analyzed blood samples from more than 7,000 Americans. All participants were at least 45 years old and also underwent a physical examination and interview at the beginning of the study. Participants were divided into three groups based on the level of the antioxidants



lutein

and saxanthin and beta-cryptoxanthin in their blood.

Cryptoxanthin reduced the chance of developing dementia by 14 percent.

More on Walla!

  • The green leaves that can stop the corona

  • One glass a day of these leaves improves heart health

  • 5 Tips from a Brain Scientist That Can Prevent Dementia

  • The natural solution to knee pain is closer than ever - with a refund from the health insurance fund

The effect of antioxidants on dementia diminished when other factors, including education, income, and exercise, were taken into account.

"These factors may help explain the link between antioxidant levels and dementia," Dr. Bydon added. Their lives. "

Tens of millions of people worldwide suffer from dementia (Photo: ShutterStock)

Dozens of studies have shown that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables can help reduce the risk of dementia, from which tens of millions of people worldwide suffer.

Experts believe that eating a certain diet may affect biological mechanisms that trigger dementia.

What a person eats can also be indirectly linked to dementia by increasing the risk of diabetes, obesity and heart disease, which are known to be linked to dementia.

Past studies have found that a Mediterranean diet, rich in vegetables, fruits, legumes and fish, lowers blood pressure, which is a risk factor for dementia.



Dr James Connell, a UK Alzheimer's researcher, said previous findings on the link between antioxidants and the risk of dementia showed "mixed" results. More, "he said."



Dr. Connell added that “the diseases that cause dementia develop over many years, but this study examined only antioxidant levels at one point in time.

"Although this study highlights an interesting potential finding, it is important that the study take a long-term view of factors that may influence the risk."

He added that "we know that the risk of dementia is complex and includes factors including age and genetics as well as lifestyle factors like our diet. Making positive lifestyle changes can reduce our risk of developing the diseases that cause dementia."

  • health

  • Nutrition and diet

  • Preventive nutrition

Tags

  • dementia

  • Alzheimer's

  • Spinach

  • green leaves

Source: walla

All life articles on 2022-05-11

You may like

Life/Entertain 2024-04-03T09:49:01.319Z
Life/Entertain 2024-04-02T15:26:26.990Z
News/Politics 2024-03-28T13:06:49.198Z
News/Politics 2024-03-29T04:27:59.767Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.