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The Mediterranean diet is not associated with neuroimaging or cognition in middle-aged adults: a cross-sectional analysis of the PREVENT dementia programme.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


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Authors

Buller-Peralta, Ingrid 
Bridgeman, Katie 
Góngora, Vanessa De La Cruz 
Dounavi, Maria-Eleni 

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) has been associated with reduced dementia incidence in several studies. It is important to understand if diet is associated with brain health in midlife, when Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are known to begin. METHODS: This study used data from the PREVENT dementia programme. Three MedDiet scores were created (the Pyramid, Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener [MEDAS] and MEDAS continuous) from a self-reported food frequency questionnaire. Primary outcomes were hippocampal volume and cube-transformed white matter hyperintensity volume. Secondary outcomes included cornu ammonis 1 and subiculum hippocampal subfield volumes, cortical thickness and measures of cognition. Sex-stratified analyses were run to explore differential associations between diet and brain health by sex. An exploratory path analysis was conducted to study if any associations between diet and brain health were mediated by cardiovascular risk factors for dementia. RESULTS: In all, 504 participants were included in this analysis, with a mean Pyramid score of 8.10 (SD 1.56). There were no significant associations between any MedDiet scoring method and any of the primary or secondary outcomes. There were no differences by sex in any analyses and no significant mediation between the Pyramid score and global cognition by cardiovascular risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, this study did not find evidence for an association between the MedDiet and either neuroimaging or cognition in a midlife population study. Future work should investigate associations between the MedDiet and Alzheimer's disease and related dementias biomarkers as well as functional neuroimaging in a midlife population.

Description

Publication status: Published

Keywords

cognition, diet, midlife, neuroimaging, Humans, Diet, Mediterranean, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Dementia, Cognition, Neuroimaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Aged, Hippocampus

Journal Title

Eur J Neurol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1351-5101
1468-1331

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Alzheimer's Association (TriBEKa‐17‐519007)
Alzheimer's Society (178, 264, 329)
Medical Research Council (MR/T001852/1)