Western dietary pattern linked to risk of developing Alzheimer's disease

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Globally, about 42 million people now have dementia, with Alzheimer's disease as the most common type of dementia. Rates of Alzheimer's disease are rising worldwide. The most important risk factors seem to be linked to diet, especially the consumption of meat, sweets, and high-fat dairy products that characterize a Western Diet. For example, when Japan made the nutrition transition from the traditional Japanese diet to the Western diet, Alzheimer's disease rates rose from 1% in 1985 to 7% in 2008, with rates lagging the nutrition transition by 20-25 years. The evidence of these risk factors, which come from ecological and observational studies, also shows that fruits, vegetables, grains, low-fat dairy products, legumes, and fish are associated with reduced risk. "Using Multicountry Ecological and Observational Studies to Determine Dietary Risk Factors for Alzheimer's Disease," a review article from the Journal of the American College of Nutrition presents the data.

In addition to reviewing the journal literature, a new ecological study was conducted using Alzheimer's disease prevalence from 10 countries (Brazil, Chile, Cuba, Egypt, India, Mongolia, Nigeria, Republic of Korea, Sri Lanka, and the United States) along with dietary supply data 5, 10, and 15 years before the prevalence data. Dietary supply of meat or animal products (minus milk) 5 years before Alzheimer's disease prevalence had the highest correlations with Alzheimer's disease prevalence in this study. The study discussed the specific risk each country and region faces for developing Alzheimer's disease based on their associated dietary habits.

Residents of the United States seem to be at particular risk, with each person in the U.S. having about a 4% chance of developing Alzheimer's disease, likely due in part to the Western dietary pattern, which tends to include a large amount of meat consumption. The author, William B. Grant, states, "reducing meat consumption could significantly reduce the risk of Alzheimer's disease as well as of several cancers, diabetes mellitus type 2, stroke, and, likely, chronic kidney disease."

He concludes, "Mounting evidence from ecological and observational studies, as well as studies of mechanisms, indicates that the Western dietary pattern -- especially the large amount of meat in that diet -- is strongly associated with risk of developing Alzheimer's disease and several other chronic diseases. Although the traditional Mediterranean diet is associated with about half the risk for Alzheimer's disease of the Western diet, the traditional diets of countries such as India, Japan, and Nigeria, with very low meat consumption, are associated with an additional 50% reduction in risk of Alzheimer's disease."

Comments

  1. Paul Brogan Paul Brogan Australia says:

    I'm not disputing the findings but to me they seem oversimplified. According to the experts our brains didn't start to grow until we starting to consume meat and they grew bigger when we learned to cook it (increased bio availability). Scientist have studied our ancestors bones and determined that they lived on 80% meat and 20% vegetable matter. Probably higher than we eat today.  If protein is linked to Alzheimer's disease shouldn't we as a species have died out long before now? Seems strange that it's only really a problem in the industrial age. There is a huge number of diseases linked to the industrial age most can be linked back to chemicals that we just dump in the sea. Then through evaporation we drink it. Do you not think that the water vapor from the sea that forms clouds, would not carry some of these chemicals that later rains in our reservoirs. Or are we ignoring that because we don't want it to be true?

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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