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Nutrition and the prevalence of dementia in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan: an ecological study.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Wu, Yu-Tzu 
Grant, William B 
Prina, A Matthew 
Lee, Hsin-yi 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Western diets are associated with obesity, vascular diseases, and metabolic syndrome and might increase dementia risk in later life. If these associations are causal, those low- and middle-income countries experiencing major changes in diet might also see an increasing prevalence of dementia. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship of dietary supply and the prevalence of dementia in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan over time using existing data and taking diagnostic criteria into account. METHODS: Estimated total energy supply and animal fat from the United Nations was linked to the 70 prevalence studies in mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan from 1980 to 2012 according to the current, 10 years, and 20 years before starting year of investigation. Studies using newer and older diagnostic criteria were separated into two groups. Spearman's rank correlation was calculated to investigate whether trends in total energy, animal fat supply, and prevalence of dementia were monotonically related. RESULTS: The supply of total energy and animal fat per capita per day in China increased considerably over the last 50 years. The original positive relationship of dietary supply and dementia prevalence disappeared after stratifying by newer and older diagnostic criteria and there was no clear time lag effect. CONCLUSION: Taking diagnostic criteria into account, there is no cross-sectional or time lag relationship between the dietary trends and changes in dementia prevalence. It may be too early to detect any such changes because current cohorts of older people did not experience these dietary changes in their early to mid-life.

Description

Keywords

China, ecological study, nutrition, prevalence of dementia, China, Dementia, Dietary Supplements, Feeding Behavior, Female, Hong Kong, Humans, Male, Nutritional Status, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Taiwan

Journal Title

J Alzheimers Dis

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1387-2877
1875-8908

Volume Title

44

Publisher

IOS Press
Sponsorship
There is no specific funding contributing to this study. Yu-Tzu Wu received a PhD scholarship from Cambridge Trust, University of Cambridge. William B. Grant received funding from Bio-Tech Pharmacal (Fayetteville, AR) and the Sunlight Research Forum (Veldhoven) and has received funding from the UVFoundation (McLean, VA), the Vitamin D Council (San Luis Obispo, CA), and the Vitamin D Society (Canada). A. Matthew Prina was supported by the Medical Research Council [grant number MR/K021907/1].