Queen Square Institute of Neurology, Faculty of Brain Sciences, University College London, London, WC1N 3AR, UK.
8-11 Queen Square Institute of Neurology, Dementia Research Centre, University College London, Queen Square, London, WC1N 3BG, UK.
Geroscience. 2022 Oct;44(5):2541-2554. doi: 10.1007/s11357-022-00615-2. Epub 2022 Jul 6.
Cohort studies suggest that the Mediterranean diet is associated with better global cognition in older adults, slower cognitive decline and lower risk of dementia. However, little is known about the relative contribution of each component of the Mediterranean diet to dementia risk or whether the diet's effects are due to one or more specific food components. We aimed to examine whether Mediterranean diet components are associated with all-cause dementia risk in the UK BioBank cohort. Participants joined the UK Biobank study from 2006 to 2010 and were followed until December 2020. 249,511 participants, who were at least 55 years old, without dementia at baseline were included. We used self-reported consumption of food groups, considered part of the Mediterranean diet including fruit, vegetables, processed meat, unprocessed red meat and unprocessed poultry, fish, cheese, wholegrains. Incident dementia was ascertained through electronic linkage to primary care records, hospital and mortality records or self-report. In this study with a total follow-up of 2,868,824 person-years (median 11.4), after adjusting for all covariates and other food groups, moderate fish consumption of between 2.0 and 3.9 times a week was associated with decreased risk of dementia (HR 0.84, 95%CI 0.71-0.98) compared to no consumption. Additionally, fruit consumption of between 1.0 and 1.9 servings a day was associated with reduced dementia risk (HR 0.85, 95%CI 0.74-0.99) compared to no consumption. No other Mediterranean diet components were associated with dementia risk suggesting that fish consumption may drive the beneficial effects seen from the Mediterranean diet. Further study of potential mechanisms and diet-based intervention trials are needed to establish this.
队列研究表明,地中海饮食与老年人的整体认知能力更好、认知能力下降更慢以及痴呆症风险更低有关。然而,对于地中海饮食的每个组成部分与痴呆症风险的相对贡献,或者饮食的影响是否归因于一种或多种特定的食物成分,知之甚少。我们旨在检查地中海饮食成分是否与英国生物银行队列中的全因痴呆症风险相关。参与者于 2006 年至 2010 年参加了英国生物银行研究,并随访至 2020 年 12 月。共有 249511 名年龄至少 55 岁、基线时无痴呆症的参与者被纳入研究。我们使用自我报告的食物组消耗情况来评估地中海饮食的组成部分,包括水果、蔬菜、加工肉类、未加工的红肉和未加工的禽肉、鱼类、奶酪和全谷物。通过与初级保健记录、医院和死亡率记录或自我报告的电子链接来确定痴呆症的发生。在这项总计随访 2868824 人年(中位数为 11.4 年)的研究中,在调整了所有协变量和其他食物组后,每周食用 2.0 到 3.9 次中等量的鱼与痴呆症风险降低相关(HR 0.84,95%CI 0.71-0.98),与不食用相比。此外,每天食用 1.0 到 1.9 份水果与降低痴呆症风险相关(HR 0.85,95%CI 0.74-0.99),与不食用相比。其他地中海饮食成分与痴呆症风险无关,这表明鱼类摄入可能是地中海饮食带来有益影响的原因。需要进一步研究潜在机制和基于饮食的干预试验来确定这一点。