Dementia Centre for Research Collaboration, School of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, the University of New South Wales, NSW, Australia.
Nutrition and Dietetics Group, School of Life and Environmental Science and The Charles Perkins Centre, Faculty of Science, the University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2019;67(2):583-619. doi: 10.3233/JAD-180468.
While the role of diet and nutrition in cognitive health and prevention of dementia in older adults has attracted much attention, the efficacy of different dietary patterns remains uncertain. Previous reviews have mainly focused on the Mediterranean diet, but either omitted other dietary patterns, lacked more recent studies, were based on cross-sectional studies, or combined older and younger populations. We followed PRISMA guidelines, and examined the efficacy of current research from randomized controlled trials and cohort studies on the effects of different dietary patterns. We reviewed the Mediterranean diet, Dietary Approach to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet, the Mediterranean-DASH diet Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diet, Anti-inflammatory diet, Healthy diet recommended by guidelines via dietary index, or Prudent healthy diets generated via statistical approaches, and their impact on cognitive health among older adults. Of 38 studies, the Mediterranean diet was the most investigated with evidence supporting protection against cognitive decline among older adults. Evidence from other dietary patterns such as the MIND, DASH, Anti-inflammatory, and Prudent healthy diets was more limited but showed promising results, especially for those at risk of cardiovascular disease. Overall, this review found positive effects of dietary patterns including the Mediterranean, DASH, MIND, and Anti-inflammatory diets on cognitive health outcomes in older adults. These dietary patterns are plant-based, rich in poly- and mono-unsaturated fatty acids with lower consumption of processed foods. Better understanding of the underlying mechanisms and effectiveness is needed to develop comprehensive and practical dietary recommendations against age-related cognitive decline among older adult.
虽然饮食和营养在认知健康和预防老年人痴呆中的作用引起了广泛关注,但不同饮食模式的效果仍不确定。以前的综述主要集中在地中海饮食上,但要么忽略了其他饮食模式,要么缺乏最近的研究,要么基于横断面研究,要么将老年人和年轻人的研究结果混合在一起。我们遵循 PRISMA 指南,研究了当前关于不同饮食模式对认知健康影响的随机对照试验和队列研究的效果。我们综述了地中海饮食、停止高血压的饮食方法(DASH)饮食、地中海-DASH 饮食干预以延缓神经退行性疾病(MIND)饮食、抗炎饮食、通过饮食指数推荐的指南健康饮食或通过统计方法生成的谨慎健康饮食,以及它们对老年人认知健康的影响。在 38 项研究中,地中海饮食的研究最多,有证据表明它可以预防老年人认知能力下降。其他饮食模式(如 MIND、DASH、抗炎和谨慎健康饮食)的证据更为有限,但结果显示出可喜的结果,尤其是对那些有心血管疾病风险的人。总的来说,这项综述发现包括地中海、DASH、MIND 和抗炎饮食在内的饮食模式对老年人的认知健康结果有积极影响。这些饮食模式以植物为主,富含多不饱和和单不饱和脂肪酸,加工食品的摄入量较低。为了制定针对老年人与年龄相关的认知能力下降的综合实用饮食建议,需要更好地了解其潜在机制和效果。