Section of NILS-LSA, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Obu, Aichi, Japan.
Department of Epidemiology of Aging, National Center for Geriatrics and Gerontology, Obu, Aichi, Japan.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 2021 Jun;75(6):946-953. doi: 10.1038/s41430-020-00734-z. Epub 2020 Sep 2.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Dietary habits are known to affect health, including the rate of brain ageing and susceptibility to diseases. This study examines the longitudinal relationship between dietary diversity and hippocampal volume, which is a key structure of memory processing and is known to be impaired in dementia.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: Subjects were aged 40-89 years (n = 1683, men: 50.6%) and participated in a 2-year follow-up study of the National Institute for Longevity Sciences-Longitudinal Study of Aging. Dietary intake was calculated from 3-day dietary records, and dietary diversity was determined using the Quantitative Index for Dietary Diversity at baseline. Longitudinal changes in hippocampal and total grey matter volumes were estimated by T1-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging and FreeSurfer software. Estimated mean brain volume change in relation to dietary diversity score quintiles was assessed by the general linear model, adjusted for age, sex, education, smoking status, alcohol intake, physical activity, and comorbidities.
The mean (± standard deviation) % decreases in hippocampal and total grey matter volume during the 2-year follow-up were 1.00% (±2.27%) and 0.78% (±1.83%), respectively. Multivariate-adjusted decreases in total grey matter volume were associated with dietary diversity score (p = 0.065, p for trend = 0.017), and the % decrease in hippocampal volume was more strongly associated with the dietary diversity score: the estimated mean (± standard error) values were 1.31% (±0.12%), 1.07% (±0.12%), 0.98% (±0.12%), 0.81% (±0.12%), and 0.85% (±0.12%), according to dietary diversity quintiles in ascending order (p = 0.030, p for trend = 0.003).
Among community dwellers, increased dietary diversity may be a new nutritional strategy to prevent hippocampal atrophy.
背景/目的:饮食习惯已知会影响健康,包括大脑衰老速度和易患疾病的风险。本研究检查了饮食多样性与海马体体积之间的纵向关系,海马体是记忆处理的关键结构,已知在痴呆症中会受损。
受试者为 40-89 岁(n=1683,男性:50.6%),并参加了国家长寿科学研究所-衰老纵向研究的为期 2 年的随访研究。饮食摄入量是根据 3 天的饮食记录计算的,基线时使用定量饮食多样性指数来确定饮食多样性。通过 T1 加权脑磁共振成像和 FreeSurfer 软件估计海马体和总灰质体积的纵向变化。通过一般线性模型评估与饮食多样性评分五分位数相关的估计平均脑体积变化,调整年龄、性别、教育、吸烟状况、酒精摄入量、身体活动和合并症。
在 2 年的随访期间,海马体和总灰质体积的平均(±标准偏差)%下降分别为 1.00%(±2.27%)和 0.78%(±1.83%)。多变量调整后的总灰质体积下降与饮食多样性评分相关(p=0.065,趋势 p=0.017),海马体体积的%下降与饮食多样性评分的相关性更强:根据饮食多样性五分位数的递增顺序,估计的平均(±标准误差)值分别为 1.31%(±0.12%)、1.07%(±0.12%)、0.98%(±0.12%)、0.81%(±0.12%)和 0.85%(±0.12%)(p=0.030,趋势 p=0.003)。
在社区居民中,增加饮食多样性可能是预防海马体萎缩的新营养策略。