Literature DB >> 29053784

Fish Intake, Genetic Predisposition to Alzheimer Disease, and Decline in Global Cognition and Memory in 5 Cohorts of Older Persons.

Cécilia Samieri1, Martha-Clare Morris2, David A Bennett3, Claudine Berr4, Philippe Amouyel5, Jean-François Dartigues1, Christophe Tzourio1, Daniel I Chasman6, Francine Grodstein7,8.   

Abstract

Fish are a primary source of long-chain omega-3 fatty acids, which may help delay cognitive aging. We pooled participants from the French Three-City study and 4 US cohorts (Nurses' Health Study, Women's Health Study, Chicago Health and Aging Project, and Rush Memory and Aging Project) for whom diet and cognitive data were available (n = 23,688 white persons, aged ≥65 years, 88% female, baseline year range of 1992-1999, and median follow-up range of 3.9-9.1 years) to investigate the relationship of fish intake to cognitive decline and examine interactions with genes related to Alzheimer disease. We estimated cohort-specific associations between fish and change in composite scores of global cognition and episodic memory using linear mixed models, and we pooled results using inverse-variance weighted meta-analysis. In multivariate analyses, higher fish intake was associated with slower decline in both global cognition and memory (P for trend ≤ 0.031). Consuming ≥4 servings/week versus <1 serving/week of fish was associated with a lower rate of memory decline: 0.018 (95% confidence interval: 0.004, 0.032) standard units, an effect estimate equivalent to that found for 4 years of age. For global cognition, no comparisons of higher versus low fish intake reached statistical significance. In this meta-analysis, higher fish intake was associated with a lower rate of memory decline. We found no evidence of effect modification by genes associated with Alzheimer disease.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29053784      PMCID: PMC5928461          DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwx330

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0002-9262            Impact factor:   4.897


  30 in total

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4.  Beneficial effects of docosahexaenoic acid on cognition in age-related cognitive decline.

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Authors:  M R Prasad; M A Lovell; M Yatin; H Dhillon; W R Markesbery
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7.  Random-effects models for longitudinal data.

Authors:  N M Laird; J H Ware
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Authors:  P Barberger-Gateau; C Raffaitin; L Letenneur; C Berr; C Tzourio; J F Dartigues; A Alpérovitch
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2.  APOE and the Association of Fatty Acids With the Risk of Stroke, Coronary Heart Disease, and Mortality.

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