Dr Puja Agarwal, an assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine at Rush University, in Chicago, in the United States, was part of a team that established just how powerful strawberries are at protecting the brain.
“We found [eating strawberries] robustly reduces dementia risk,” Agarwal says.She and her team observed what people ate during their lifetime, tested their cognition in tasks and memory tests, and analysed their brains donated after death.
The study found that those with the highest pelargonidin intake ate more than one serving – a half cup of strawberries – a week, Agarwal says.
A higher pelargonidin intake was linked to fewer tau tangles.
Fruit is an important component of the “Mind” (Mediterranean-Dash intervention for neurodegenerative delay) diet developed at Rush University.
This diet includes foods that have been strongly linked to increased brain health.
Keep your brain sharp with the heart-healthy Mediterranean or Mind diets
Studies suggest dementia risk could be reduced by as much as 53 per cent for people who follow this diet rigorously, and by about 35 per cent for those who follow it moderately.
The diet has 15 components, including 10 “brain-healthy food groups” – leafy green vegetables, other vegetables, nuts, beans, whole grains, fish, poultry, olive oil, the aforementioned fruits and wine – and five less healthy ones, including meat, cheese and fast and fried food.Author and psychotherapist Amy Bloom writes about her husband’s early-onset Alzheimer’s in her memoir, In Love, in which she touches on the lack of available guidance when it comes to protecting ourselves from dementia.5 ordinary foods with extraordinary health benefits, from beets to broccoli
“All you hear is eat f*****g walnuts,” she writes.
It’s no good just hearing a thing is good for us; it’s only meaningful if we understand why.
The Rush University researchers hypothesised that strawberries’ preventive effects on tau tangles is to do with pelargonidin’s antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.
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“Through animal studies,” Agarwal says, “we know pelargonidin crosses the blood-brain barrier and has neuroprotective effects.”
Other foods rich in flavonoids deliver significant benefits not just for brain health but overall health.
A 2014 study showed those who ate blueberries enjoyed improvements in memory and attention span, which is thought to be because the berries enable an increase in blood flow to key areas of the brain.As for walnuts, they are rich in alpha-Linolenic acid, a plant-based omega 3 fatty acid, and are known to have anti-oxidative properties which help to protect the body against the accumulation of oxidative stress and inflammation – things linked to dementia among other diseases.Fish, rich in omega 3 fatty acids, is also good brain food. Cold-water fatty fish, such as salmon, are especially rich in this important brain fat.
The brain is the fattiest organ in the body, and a good supply of healthy fats keeps it functioning properly.
Oily fish is also a source of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), a fatty acid that is good for our hearts, skin and especially our brains; it has a positive impact on cognition and prevents memory loss.Wasabi, the green paste often eaten as a condiment to accompany sushi, has also been found to have significant benefits for our brains.A study published by the Department of Cognitive Health Science at Tohoku University, in Japan, found that taking a wasabi supplement every night for 12 weeks improved working memory and also episodic memory – the conscious retrieval, or recall, of memories – in adults aged 60 to 80.
Researchers described the changes in memory as substantial and dramatic.
There is one caveat: the wasabi needs to be made from Japanese horseradish. The green condiment found in most sushi restaurants outside Japan is made from non-Japanese horseradish, cornflour and food colouring.
Real wasabi’s antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties help enhance neural functions in the brain and neural plasticity in the hippocampus, an area of the brain which is crucial for memory.
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Regarding the implications the latest studies might have in the fight against dementia, Agarwal says: “There are simple lifestyle approaches, such as eating more berries, to reduce your risk.”
We may not be able to eliminate the risk of getting dementia, but we can reduce it – starting at breakfast with a bowlful of berries.
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