Preventing Alzheimer’s Disease with Plants

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If foods like berries and dark green leafy vegetables have been found protective against cognitive decline, why aren’t they recognized as such in many guidelines?

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Intake of saturated fats and added sugars, two of the primary components of a modern Western diet, is linked with the development of Alzheimer’s disease. There has been a global shift in dietary composition, from traditional diets high in starches and fiber, to what has been termed the Western diet, high in fat and sugar, low in whole plant foods. What’s so great about fruits and vegetables?

Plant-derived foods contain thousands of compounds with antioxidant properties, some of which can traverse the blood-brain barrier, and may have neuroprotective effects by assisting with antioxidant defense. There’s this concept of brain rust, that neurodegenerative diseases arise from excess oxidative stress. But Nature has gifted humankind with a plethora of plants—fruits, vegetables and nuts, and the diverse array of bioactive nutrients present in these natural products may play a pivotal role in prevention and one day, perhaps, even the cure of various neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Accumulated evidence suggests that naturally occurring plant compounds may potentially hinder neurodegeneration, and even improve memory and cognitive function, as I’ve shared in my videos about blueberries and strawberries, and treating Alzheimer’s with spices such as saffron or turmeric.

Vegetables may be particularly protective, in part because of certain compounds we eat that concentrate in the brain, found in dark green leafy vegetables, the consumption of which are associated with lower rates of age-related cognitive decline.

Yet when you look at systematic reviews on what we can do to prevent cognitive decline, you’ll see conclusions like this: “The current literature does not provide adequate evidence to make recommendations for interventions.” Same with Alzheimer’s: “Currently, insufficient evidence exists to draw firm conclusions on the association of any modifiable factors with risk of Alzheimer’s disease.” They cite the lack of randomized controlled trials as the basis for their conclusions. RCTs are the gold standard used to test new medicines. You randomize people into two groups; half get the drug, and half don’t, to control for confounding factors. The highest level of evidence necessary, because drugs may kill 100,000 Americans every year–not overdoses, not medication errors, not illicit drugs–just regular, FDA-approved prescription drugs, the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. So, you’d better make absolutely sure the benefits of new drugs outweigh the life-threatening risks.

But we’re talking about diet and exercise—the side-effects are all good, so we don’t need the same level of evidence to prescribe them.

A modest proposal was published recently in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, an editorial calling for longitudinal study of dementia prevention. They agreed that definitive evidence for the effectiveness of dementia prevention methods was lacking, so we need large-scaled randomized trials. Let’s start with 10,000 healthy volunteers in their twenties and split them into five groups. There’s evidence, for example, that traumatic brain injury is a risk factor for Alzheimer’s, because people with head injuries appear more likely to get the disease, but it’s never been put to the test. So let’s take 2,000 people, and beat half of them in the head with baseball bats, and the other half we’ll use Styrofoam bats as a control for the others. Until we have randomized control data, we can’t have physicians recommend patients not get hit in the head.

We should probably chain a thousand people to a treadmill for 40 years, and a thousand people to a couch before recommending exercise. A thousand are forced to do crossword puzzles; another thousand forced to watch Jerry Springer reruns. Lots of meat and dairy or not for the next 40 years, and we can hook a thousand folks on four packs a day just to be sure. We help our patients to quit smoking despite the fact that there’s not a single randomized controlled trial where they held people down and piped smoke into their lungs for a few decades. “It is time to realize that the ultimate study in regard to lifestyle and cognitive health cannot be done. Yet the absence of definitive evidence should not restrict physicians from making reasonable recommendations based on the evidence that is available.”

To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video. This is just an approximation of the audio contributed by Katie Schloer.

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Images thanks to Petter Duvander via Flickr.

Intake of saturated fats and added sugars, two of the primary components of a modern Western diet, is linked with the development of Alzheimer’s disease. There has been a global shift in dietary composition, from traditional diets high in starches and fiber, to what has been termed the Western diet, high in fat and sugar, low in whole plant foods. What’s so great about fruits and vegetables?

Plant-derived foods contain thousands of compounds with antioxidant properties, some of which can traverse the blood-brain barrier, and may have neuroprotective effects by assisting with antioxidant defense. There’s this concept of brain rust, that neurodegenerative diseases arise from excess oxidative stress. But Nature has gifted humankind with a plethora of plants—fruits, vegetables and nuts, and the diverse array of bioactive nutrients present in these natural products may play a pivotal role in prevention and one day, perhaps, even the cure of various neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Accumulated evidence suggests that naturally occurring plant compounds may potentially hinder neurodegeneration, and even improve memory and cognitive function, as I’ve shared in my videos about blueberries and strawberries, and treating Alzheimer’s with spices such as saffron or turmeric.

Vegetables may be particularly protective, in part because of certain compounds we eat that concentrate in the brain, found in dark green leafy vegetables, the consumption of which are associated with lower rates of age-related cognitive decline.

Yet when you look at systematic reviews on what we can do to prevent cognitive decline, you’ll see conclusions like this: “The current literature does not provide adequate evidence to make recommendations for interventions.” Same with Alzheimer’s: “Currently, insufficient evidence exists to draw firm conclusions on the association of any modifiable factors with risk of Alzheimer’s disease.” They cite the lack of randomized controlled trials as the basis for their conclusions. RCTs are the gold standard used to test new medicines. You randomize people into two groups; half get the drug, and half don’t, to control for confounding factors. The highest level of evidence necessary, because drugs may kill 100,000 Americans every year–not overdoses, not medication errors, not illicit drugs–just regular, FDA-approved prescription drugs, the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. So, you’d better make absolutely sure the benefits of new drugs outweigh the life-threatening risks.

But we’re talking about diet and exercise—the side-effects are all good, so we don’t need the same level of evidence to prescribe them.

A modest proposal was published recently in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, an editorial calling for longitudinal study of dementia prevention. They agreed that definitive evidence for the effectiveness of dementia prevention methods was lacking, so we need large-scaled randomized trials. Let’s start with 10,000 healthy volunteers in their twenties and split them into five groups. There’s evidence, for example, that traumatic brain injury is a risk factor for Alzheimer’s, because people with head injuries appear more likely to get the disease, but it’s never been put to the test. So let’s take 2,000 people, and beat half of them in the head with baseball bats, and the other half we’ll use Styrofoam bats as a control for the others. Until we have randomized control data, we can’t have physicians recommend patients not get hit in the head.

We should probably chain a thousand people to a treadmill for 40 years, and a thousand people to a couch before recommending exercise. A thousand are forced to do crossword puzzles; another thousand forced to watch Jerry Springer reruns. Lots of meat and dairy or not for the next 40 years, and we can hook a thousand folks on four packs a day just to be sure. We help our patients to quit smoking despite the fact that there’s not a single randomized controlled trial where they held people down and piped smoke into their lungs for a few decades. “It is time to realize that the ultimate study in regard to lifestyle and cognitive health cannot be done. Yet the absence of definitive evidence should not restrict physicians from making reasonable recommendations based on the evidence that is available.”

To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video. This is just an approximation of the audio contributed by Katie Schloer.

Please consider volunteering to help out on the site.

Images thanks to Petter Duvander via Flickr.

Doctor's Note

I’ve previously discussed how drug-centric approaches to evidence-based medicine may neglect some of the most convincing data: Evidence-Based Medicine or Evidence-Biased?

A sampling of some of my recent Alzheimer’s videos:

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