| Literature DB >> 21923981 |
Peter Pribis1, Rudolph N Bailey2, Andrew A Russell2, Marcia A Kilsby3, Magaly Hernandez1, Winston J Craig1, Tevni Grajales2, David J Shavlik4, Joan Sabatè5.
Abstract
Walnuts contain a number of potentially neuroprotective compounds like vitamin E, folate, melatonin, several antioxidative polyphenols and significant amounts of n-3 α-linolenic fatty acid. The present study sought to determine the effect of walnuts on verbal and non-verbal reasoning, memory and mood. A total of sixty-four college students were randomly assigned to two treatment sequences in a crossover fashion: walnuts-placebo or placebo-walnuts. Baseline data were collected for non-verbal reasoning, verbal reasoning, memory and mood states. Data were collected again after 8 weeks of intervention. After 6 weeks of washout, the intervention groups followed the diets in reverse order. Data were collected once more at the end of the 8-week intervention period. No significant increases were detected for mood, non-verbal reasoning or memory on the walnut-supplemented diet. However, inferential verbal reasoning increased significantly by 11.2 %, indicating a medium effect size (P = 0.009; d = 0.567). In young, healthy, normal adults, walnuts do not appear to improve memory, mood or non-verbal reasoning abilities. However, walnuts may have the ability to increase inferential reasoning.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21923981 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114511004302
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718