中年和晚年富含类黄酮的水果摄入量及其与痴呆症风险的关系:弗雷明汉心脏研究

IF 4.3 Q2 BUSINESS
C. Lyu, P. F. Jacques, P. M. Doraiswamy, B. Young, A. S. Gurnani, R. Au, Phillip H. Hwang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景水果是黄酮类化合物的重要来源,老年人摄入更多的膳食黄酮类化合物与痴呆症风险的降低有关。我们研究了中年和晚年摄入富含类黄酮的水果与痴呆症之间的关系。我们假设,中年和晚年成人累计摄入更多的富含类黄酮的水果与全因痴呆症风险的降低有关。参与者弗拉明汉心脏研究后代队列中的参与者(n = 2,790)在1991年至1995年期间参加了第五次核心检查,当时未患痴呆症且年龄至少在45岁以上,并在第五次至第九次核心检查期间进行了有效的食物频率问卷调查。测量通过食物频率问卷调查收集了类黄酮含量高或对总体类黄酮摄入量有重要贡献的水果的摄入量。食物频率问卷中富含类黄酮的水果包括葡萄干或葡萄、西梅、香蕉、新鲜苹果或梨、苹果汁或苹果酒、橙子、橙汁、柚子、柚子汁、草莓、蓝莓以及桃、杏或李子。痴呆症的确定以多学科共识委员会为基础,包括根据研究标准诊断出的全因痴呆症和阿尔茨海默病痴呆症。结果中年期(45-59 岁;n = 1,642 人)和晚年期(60-82 岁;n = 1,148 人)累计水果总摄入量增加与全因痴呆风险降低 44% 显著相关(HR = 0.56;95% CI = 0.32-0.98;p = 0.044),而晚年期则不然。全因痴呆症风险的降低还与中年和晚年苹果或梨的摄入量较高、仅中年葡萄干或葡萄的摄入量较高、仅晚年橘子、柚子、蓝莓和桃、杏或李子的摄入量较高有关。结论在弗雷明汉心脏研究的参与者中,中年时摄入更多富含类黄酮的水果与痴呆症风险的降低有关,尽管中年和晚年摄入特定水果可能对痴呆症有保护作用。这些发现可能有助于为未来的建议提供参考,即饮食干预何时对整个生命过程中大脑的健康老化最有益。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Flavonoid-Rich Fruit Intake in Midlife and Late-Life and Associations with Risk of Dementia: The Framingham Heart Study

Background

Fruits are an important source of flavonoids, and greater intake of dietary flavonoids in older adults has been shown to be associated with decreased risk of dementia. It is unclear whether this relationship is similar or different between younger adults and older adults.

Objectives

We examined for associations between midlife and late-life intake of flavonoid-rich fruits and incident dementia. We hypothesized that greater total cumulative intake of flavonoid-rich fruits in midlife and late-life adults would be associated with reduced risk of all-cause dementia.

Design

Longitudinal, cohort study design.

Setting

Framingham Heart Study, which is a longitudinal, multi-generational community-based cohort based in Framingham, Massachusetts, USA.

Participants

Participants from the Framingham Heart Study Offspring cohort were included (n = 2,790) who attended the fifth core exam between 1991 to 1995, and were dementiafree and at least 45 years of age at that time, as well as had valid food frequency questionnaires from the fifth to ninth core exams.

Measurements

Consumption of fruits with high flavonoid content or are important contributors to overall flavonoid intake was collected via food frequency questionnaire. Flavonoid-rich fruits from the food frequency questionnaire included raisins or grapes, prunes, bananas, fresh apples or pears, apple juice or cider, oranges, orange juice, grapefruit, grapefruit juice, strawberries, blueberries, and peaches, apricots, or plums. Dementia ascertainment was based on a multidisciplinary consensus committee, and included all-cause dementia and Alzheimer’s disease dementia diagnoses based on research criteria. Cox models were used to examine associations between cumulative fruit intake and incident dementia, stratified by midlife (45–59 years; n = 1,642) and late-life (60–82 years; n = 1,148).

Results

Greater cumulative total fruit intake in midlife, but not late-life, was significantly associated with a 44% decreased risk of all-cause dementia (HR = 0.56; 95% CI = 0.32–0.98; p = 0.044). Decreased risk of all-cause dementia was also associated with higher intake of apples or pears in midlife and late-life, as well as higher intake of raisins or grapes in midlife only, and higher intake of oranges, grapefruit, blueberries, and peaches, apricots, or plums in late-life only.

Conclusions

Among participants from the Framingham Heart Study, greater overall consumption of flavonoid-rich fruits in midlife was associated with reduced risk of dementia, though intake of specific fruits in midlife and late-life may have a protective role against developing dementia. These findings may help to inform future recommendations on when dietary interventions may be most beneficial to healthy brain aging across the life course.

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来源期刊
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease
The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: The JPAD Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’Disease will publish reviews, original research articles and short reports to improve our knowledge in the field of Alzheimer prevention including: neurosciences, biomarkers, imaging, epidemiology, public health, physical cognitive exercise, nutrition, risk and protective factors, drug development, trials design, and heath economic outcomes.JPAD will publish also the meeting abstracts from Clinical Trial on Alzheimer Disease (CTAD) and will be distributed both in paper and online version worldwide.We hope that JPAD with your contribution will play a role in the development of Alzheimer prevention.
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