Eating fish keeps older people brainy“I had grown up being told to eat more fish
because it was brain food,” says Martha Clare Morris, an epidemiologist at
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, who led the study.
Eating fish keeps older people
brainy
• 16:13 11 October
2005
• NewScientist.com news
service
• Shaoni
Bhattacharya
Eating fish at least once a week may keep you brainy
in old age, new research suggests.
A study of about 4000 senior citizens of Chicago in
the US showed that all of them lost some cognitive sharpness – such as
memory and speed of thinking – as the years passed.
However, among those who ate fish once a week, the
rate of cognitive decline was about 10% slower. And it was 13% slower among
those who consumed at least two fish meals a week. The difference is the
equivalent of being three to four years younger, say the
researchers.
“I had grown up being told to eat more fish
because it was brain food,” says Martha Clare Morris, an epidemiologist at
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, who led the study. The results show
this “makes perfect sense”, she told
New
Scientist.
Previous work has shown that the most important
fatty acids in the brain are in the omega-3 class. This group is found in
abundance in fish, which offers a biological explanation for the
finding.
Prison violence
“In terms of cognitive function, this is a
very exciting area,” says Sarah Stanner, a senior scientist at the British
Nutrition Foundation in London, UK. “But it’s quite early days, and
we need other studies.”
Previous research has hinted that omega-3 oils may
be useful for improving cognitive skills and behaviour in other groups. Two UK
studies suggested benefits in schoolchildren.
And work by Bernard Gesch and colleagues, published
in 2002, showed that giving vitamin, mineral and essential fatty acid
supplements to prisoners lessened violent behaviour, although it was
“difficult to disentangle the effects” of the different supplements,
Stanner notes.
Eating fish is already known to improve the health
of the heart. But most people do not eat enough of it. In the UK, on average,
people eat a third of a portion a week – well below the recommended
amount for keeping a healthy heart. The UK Food Standards Agency
advises that boys, men and women past reproductive age eat up to four portions
of fish a week, and that women of child-bearing age eat up to two
portions.
Neural commmunication
In the Chicago study, residents over the age of 65
living in one district were each tracked for six years. They were interviewed
and given four standard cognitive tests at the start of the study, after 3 years
and at the end. The tests included measures of immediate and delayed memory,
cognitive speed and attention. Their eating habits were established by
questionnaire.
“At this point there are so few studies done
that we can’t say for sure that eating fish preserves your thinking with
age,” admits Morris. But she adds: “It does look promising, and
there’s a good biological mechanism.”
She notes that recent studies have shown that
elderly rodents given an omega-3 oil fatty acid called DHA (docosahexaenoic
acid) exhibit better communication between the neurons in their
brains.
Journal reference:
Archives of
Neurology (vol 62, p 1)
Posted: Sun - October 30, 2005 at 08:42 PM |
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