| Literature DB >> 26349802 |
Felice N Jacka1,2,3,4, Nicolas Cherbuin5, Kaarin J Anstey6, Perminder Sachdev7, Peter Butterworth8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent meta-analyses confirm a relationship between diet quality and both depression and cognitive health in adults. While the biological pathways that underpin these relationships are likely multitudinous, extensive evidence from animal studies points to the involvement of the hippocampus. The aim of this study was to examine the association between dietary patterns and hippocampal volume in humans, and to assess whether diet was associated with differential rates of hippocampal atrophy over time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26349802 PMCID: PMC4563885 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0461-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | N (% or SD) |
|---|---|
| Female | 118 (46 %) |
| Age (mean) | 62.6 years (SD = 1.42) |
| Not completed high school | 48 (17 %) |
| Physical activity | |
| None/mild | 117 (46 %) |
| Moderate | 106 (42 %) |
| Vigorous | 32 (13 %) |
| Smoker | 17 (7 %) |
| Body mass index | |
| Normal/under | 96 (38 %) |
| Overweight | 117 (46 %) |
| Obese | 42 (16 %) |
| More than two depression symptoms | 62 (22 %) |
| Reported antidepressant medications | 18 (6 %) |
| Employed (full-time or part-time) | 119 (41 %) |
Results from random-intercept regression models, separate models for left and right hippocampal volume
| Covariates | Left hippocampal volume | Right hippocampal volume | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β (SE) |
| β (SE) |
| |
| Prudent (healthy) diet | 48.7 (22.8) | .032 | 17.6 (22.9) | .442 |
| Western (unhealthy) diet | −52.6 (26.9) | .05 | −30.6 (27.0) | .256 |
| Wave | −327.5 (26.2) | < .001 | −235.8 (27.4) | < .001 |
| Sex (ref = male) | −289.3 (46.5) | < .001 | −294.4 (46.7) | < .001 |
| Baseline age (years) | 1.77 (14.5) | .903 | 6.9 (14.6) | .635 |
| Depression symptoms | −6.0 (9.9) | .546 | 2.8 (10.1) | .780 |
| Reported depression medication | −78.2 (90.3) | .386 | −146.2 (90.8) | .107 |
| Working (ref = not working) | 47.1 (36.0) | .191 | 75.1 (36.9) | .042 |
| Did not complete high school | −34.5 (58.3) | .554 | −82.0 (58.7) | .162 |
| Regular exercise | ||||
| Moderate | −37.5 (44.3) | .397 | −12.2 (44.5) | .784 |
| Vigorous | 106.8 (67.0) | .111 | 32.7 (67.4) | .628 |
| Current smoker | 90.7 (84.1) | .280 | 79.3 (84.5) | .348 |
| Diabetes | −160.8 (86.6) | .063 | −66.3 (87.1) | .446 |
| Hypertension | −39.1 (43.8) | .372 | −13.5 (44.0) | .758 |
| Constant | 3066.9 | 2735.5 | ||
Hippocampal volume was corrected for intracranial volume. Other covariates included elapsed time between magnetic resonance imaging and change in intracranial volume over time. SE standard error
Fig. 1Predicted left hippocampal volume (with standard errors represented by error bars) at baseline and 4-year follow-up for respondents classified with poor, average and good quality diet based on scores on the Western and prudent dietary factor scores (poor defined as 1 SD below mean on prudent and 1 SD above mean on Western dietary factor scores; average defined as mean/0 on both prudent and Western dietary factor scores; good defined as 1 SD above mean on prudent and 1 SD below mean on Western dietary factor scores)