Literature Review

Magnesium-rich diet linked to lower dementia risk


 

FROM EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUTRITION

Association, not causation

Yuko Hara, PhD, director of Aging and Prevention, Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, noted that the study is observational and therefore shows an association, not causation.

“People eating a high-magnesium diet may also be eating a brain-healthy diet and getting high levels of nutrients/minerals other than magnesium alone,” suggested Dr. Hara, who was not involved with the study.

She noted that many foods are good sources of magnesium, including spinach, almonds, cashews, legumes, yogurt, brown rice, and avocados.

“Eating a brain-healthy diet (for example, the Mediterranean diet) is one of the Seven Steps to Protect Your Cognitive Vitality that ADDF’s Cognitive Vitality promotes,” she said.

Open Access funding was enabled and organized by the Council of Australian University Librarians and its Member Institutions. Ms. Alateeq, her co-authors, and Dr. Hara declare no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article originally appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Antipsychotic cuts Alzheimer’s-related agitation
MDedge Neurology
High stress levels linked to cognitive decline
MDedge Neurology
Two diets tied to lower Alzheimer’s pathology at autopsy
MDedge Neurology
Older men more at risk as dangerous falls rise for all seniors
MDedge Neurology
Bruce Willis’ frontotemporal dementia is not your grandpa’s dementia
MDedge Neurology
Restless legs a new modifiable risk factor for dementia?
MDedge Neurology
Tooth loss and diabetes together hasten mental decline
MDedge Neurology
Longer telomeres tied to better brain health
MDedge Neurology
Poor bone health is a ‘robust’ dementia risk factor
MDedge Neurology
Specific brain damage links hypertension to cognitive impairment
MDedge Neurology