Eating foods rich in vitamin E,
but not other antioxidants, lowers risk of dementia
Consuming more vitamin E through the diet appears to
be associated with a lower risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease, according
to a report in the July issue of Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Oxidative stress is thought to play a role in the development of Alzheimer's
disease, according to background information in the article. Experimental data
suggest that antioxidants, nutrients that help repair this damage, may protect
against the degeneration of nervous system cells. "Although clinical trials
have shown no benefit of antioxidant supplements for Alzheimer's disease, the
wider variety of antioxidants in food sources is not well studied relative to
dementia risk; a few studies, with varying lengths of follow-up, have yielded
inconsistent results," the authors write.
Elizabeth E. Devore, Sc.D., of Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands,
and colleagues assessed 5,395 participants 55 years and older who did not have
dementia between 1990 and 1993. Participants underwent a home interview and two
clinical examinations at the beginning of the study, and provided dietary information
through a two-step process involving a meal-based checklist and a food questionnaire.
The researchers focused on four antioxidants: vitamin E, vitamin C, beta-carotene
and flavonoids. The major food sources of vitamin E were margarine, sunflower
oil, butter, cooking fat, soybean oil and mayonnaise; vitamin C came mainly from
oranges, kiwi, grapefruit juice, grapefruit, cauliflower, red bell peppers and
red cabbage; beta carotene, from carrots, spinach, vegetable soup, endive and
tomato; and flavonoids from tea, onions, apples and carrots.
Over an average of 9.6 years of follow-up, 465 participants developed dementia;
365 of those were diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. After adjusting for other
potentially related factors, the one-third of individuals who consumed the most
vitamin E (a median of 18.5 milligrams per day) were 25 percent less likely to
develop dementia than the one-third of participants who consumed the least (a
median of 9 milligrams per day). Dietary intake levels of vitamin C, beta-carotene
and flavonoids were not associated with dementia risk. Results were similar when
only the participants diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease were assessed.
"The brain is a site of high metabolic activity, which makes it vulnerable
to oxidative damage, and slow accumulation of such damage over a lifetime may
contribute to the development of dementia," the authors write. "In particular,
when beta-amyloid (a hallmark of pathologic Alzheimer's disease) accumulates in
the brain, an inflammatory response is likely evoked that produces nitric oxide
radicals and downstream neurodegenerative effects. Vitamin E is a powerful fat-soluble
antioxidant that may help to inhibit the pathogenesis of dementia."
Future studies are needed to evaluate dietary intake of antioxidants and dietary
risks, including different points at which consuming more antioxidants might reduce
risk, the authors conclude.
This study was supported in part by a grant from the Netherlands Organization
for Scientific Research (Dr. Breteler) and by a training grant from the National
Institutes of Health and by a U.S. Fulbright Fellowship to the Netherlands (Dr.
Devore).
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