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Current Position:Home » News » Recalls & Alerts » Alerts & Food Safety » Topic

Sat fats hamper brain function and memory: study

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2012-05-22  Origin: foodnavigator  Authour: Nathan Gray
Core Tip: Consumption of saturated fats may be associated with decreases in memory and reductions in brain functioning, and could lead to an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease, according to new research in women.
It has been long suggested that excessive consumption of ‘bad’ fats – such as saturated and trans fats – could be bad for heart health. But according to new research, consumption of saturated fat could also be associated with declines in overall cognitive functions and memory in women. In contrast, consumption of ‘good’ (mono-unsaturated) fats may be associated with better overall cognitive function and memory, suggest the US-based researchers.

Writing in the
 Annals of Neurology the research team analysed data from more than 6,000 women – finding that women over 65 who consumed the highest levels of saturated fats had worse overall cognitive functions than those who consumed the least.

"When looking at changes in cognitive function, what we found is that the total amount of fat intake did not really matter, but the type of fat did,"
 explained study author Dr Olivia Okerek from the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, in the US.  

Okereke said the findings
 “have significant public health implications," arguing that “substituting the good fat in place of the bad fat is a fairly simple dietary modification that could help prevent decline in memory."

The research noted that even subtle reductions in cognitive functioning can lead to an increased risk of developing more serious conditions, such as dementia and Alzheimer's disease.

Study details

The research studied data from the 40,000 strong Women's Health Study – focusing in on a subset group of 6,183 women, all over the age of 65.

The women all participated in three cognitive function tests, spaced out every two years. In addition the women filled out detailed food frequency surveys at the start of the study – prior to the cognitive testing.

Okereke and her team revealed that women who consumed the highest amounts of saturated fat had worse overall cognitive and verbal memory scores over the four years of testing, when compared to those who consumed the lowest amounts.

Women who ate the most of the monounsaturated fats had better patterns of cognitive scores over time, they said.

The researchers concluded that varying consumption levels of the major specific fat types, rather than total fat intake itself, appears to influence cognitive aging.

Source:
 Annals of Neurology
Published online ahead of print, doi:
 
10.1002/ana.23593 
“Dietary fat types and 4-year cognitive change in community-dwelling older women”
Authors: O.I. Okereke, B.A. Rosner, D.H. Kim, J.H. Kang, N.R. Cook,
 et al
 
 
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