| Literature DB >> 33187212 |
Anita Mielech1, Anna Puścion-Jakubik1, Renata Markiewicz-Żukowska1, Katarzyna Socha1.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia, and the aging of the population means that the number of cases is successively increasing. The cause of the disease has not been established, but it is suggested that many factors affect it, including nutritional aspects. As part of the work, the PubMed database has been searched, beginning from 2005, for terms related to key nutritional aspects. A diet rich in antioxidant vitamins can improve the cognitive functions of patients. Thanks to an adequate intake of B vitamins, homocysteine levels are reduced, which indirectly protects against the development of the disease. A properly balanced diet, as well as the use of appropriate supplementation, can contribute to improving the clinical condition of patients with AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; antioxidant; nutrition
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33187212 PMCID: PMC7696081 DOI: 10.3390/nu12113458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Characteristics of symptoms of different variants of Alzheimer’s disease [9].
| Language Variant/Logopenic Progressive Aphasia (LPA) | Frontal Variant | Visual Variant/Posterior Cortical Atrophy (PCA) | Apraxic Variant |
|---|---|---|---|
| For at least the first two years, there is only an isolated language deficit of unnoticeable onset, progressive, without previous language disorders, and no other specific causes for the above disturbances. | Pronounced disturbances in behavior and executive functions. These often mimic the behavioral disturbances in frontotemporal dementia. | Initially, visual-spatial disorders dominate without any evident ophthalmic pathology, later psychotic symptoms appear, and in the final stage, there is a dementia syndrome with deep cognitive deficits, disturbing everyday functioning. | Inability or difficulty in performing learned movements, while understanding the command, the willingness to perform it. The lack of impaired motor coordination, and weakened sensation and muscle strength. |
| After two years, other cognitive functions deteriorate, although the language deficit dominates and deepens much faster than the other ones. | This is followed by the inability to see more than one object or one element of an object at the same time (simultaneous diagnosis), finger agnosia, page orientation disorders (right/left), and apraxia. |
Summary of studies on vitamin B intake and measurements in AD.
| Vitamins | Type of Study | Number of Participants/Age [Year] | Assessment | Intervention/ | Duration | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INTERVENTIONS | |||||||
| Vitamins B | randomized controlled trial | 266/≥70 | MMSE, Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, CVLT | 0.8 mg folic acid + 20 mg vitamin B6 + 0.5 mg vitamin B12/day | 2 years | (+) slowing cognitive decline | [ |
| Folic acid | randomized controlled trial | 121/40–90 | MMSE, ADL | 1.25 mg of folic acid + donepezil/day | 6 months | (+) beneficial effects in patients with AD | [ |
| Vitamins B | randomized placebo controlled trial | 279/≥65 | MMSE, NTB, CDR | 500 μg methylcobalamin + 400 μg folic acid or placebo/day | 2 years | (-) lack of reduction of cognitive decline | [ |
| Vitamin B12, folic acid | randomized, placebo-controlled trial | 2919/74.1 ± 6.5 | MMSE and others tests | 400 μg of folic acid + 500 μg of vitamin B12/day | 2 years | (-) lack of reduction of cognitive decline | [ |
| MEASUREMENTS | |||||||
| Folic acid, vitamins B6 and B12 | randomized trial | 266/≥70 | CDR | folic acid, vitamins B6 and B12 measurements in serum | 2 years | (+) the effectiveness of vitamin B therapy when omega-3 levels are in the upper normal range | [ |
| B12 | cross-sectional study | 4605 (2396 with AD)/≥55 | China’s validation MMSE | homocysteine and B12 serum levels | 1 measurement | (+) high folate and B12 levels are protective factors | [ |
| Vitamin B12 and folic acid | cross-sectional study | 290/geriatric patients | The authors performed tests | vitamin B12 and folic acid level | 1 measurement | (−) serum folic and vitamin B12 levels are not reliable tests for screening presymptomatic AD | [ |
| CONSUMPTION | |||||||
| Vitamins B | cohort study | 2533/50–70 | - | diet intake of vitamin B12, B6 | 2.3 years | (−) low intake of vitamin B12 intensify cognitive decline | [ |
(+)—confirmed or (−)—no confirmed association of intervention/concentration measurement/consumption with Alzheimer’s disease, ADL, Activities of Daily Living scale; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating scale; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; NTB, Neurocognitive test Battery; TICS-M, The Modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status.
Summary of studies on vitamin A intake and AD.
| Vitamins | Study Design | Participants [ | Assessment | Intervention/ | Duration | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MEASUREMENTS | |||||||
| Vitamin A | cross-sectional study | 333/≥60 | MMSE, Dementia Rating Scale, Geriatric Depression Scale, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning | vitamin A serum level | 1 measurement | (+) deficiency increases the risk of MCI | [ |
| CONSUMPTION | |||||||
| β-carotene | prospective study | 49,493/average: 48 | SCF, FFQ test | long-term intakes of carotenoids | 22 years | (+) higher consumption of β-carotene is associated with a lower risk of cognitive performance | [ |
| β-carotene | randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 2533/45–60 | semantic and phonemic fluency tests, executive function | six 24-h dietary records | 13 years | (−) consumption of fruit rich in β-carotene did not decrease the risk of developing cognitive impairment | [ |
(+)—confirmed or (−)—no confirmed association of intervention/concentration measurement/consumption with Alzheimer’s disease, FFQ, Food Frequency Questionnaire; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; SCF, Subjective Cognitive Function; MCI, mild cognitive impairment.
Summary of studies on vitamin C and E consumption, supplementation, and blood measurements, and AD.
| Vitamins | Study Design | Participants [ | Assessment | Intervention/Measurements | Duration | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INTERVENTIONS | |||||||
| E | randomized controlled trial | 613 with AD/ | MMSE | 2000 IU/day of α-tocopherol + 20 mg/day of memantine | 2.27 years | (+) slowing functional decline | [ |
| E | randomized controlled trial cohort study | 7540/>60 | MIS, TICS-m, NYU Paragraph Delayed Recall | 400 IU of vitamin E/day and/or 200 μg of selenium/day | 6 years | (−) supplementation does not prevent AD | [ |
| C and E | randomized controlled trial | 256/60–75 | MMSE | 300 mg of vitamin E + 400 mg of vitamin C/day | 1 year | (−) supplementation does not prevent cognitive decline | [ |
| MEASUREMENTS | |||||||
| E | cross-sectional study | 113/88.5 ± 6.0 | MMSE | α- and γ-tocopherol brain levels | 3 years | (+) vitamin E facilitates maintenance a presynaptic proteins level | [ |
| E | cross-sectional study | 716/>65 | MMSE | tocopherols and total vitamin E levels | 1 measurement | (+) lower levels of total tocopherols, total tocotrienols, and total vitamin E are associated with an increased likelihood of developing AD | [ |
| CONSUMPTION | |||||||
| C and E | double-blind, placebo-controlled | 2533/45–60 | verbal memory (RI-48 cued recall, semantic, and phonemic fluency tests) and executive function (trail-making and forward and backward digit span tests) | intake of fruit and vegetable intake (24-h dietary records) | 13 years | (+) improvement of verbal memory | [ |
| C | prospective, longitudinal cohort study | 925/58–98 | FFQ | intake of strawberries (vitamin C) | 6.7 years | (+) possible reduction of AD | [ |
(+)—confirmed or (−)—no confirmed association of intervention/concentration measurement/consumption with Alzheimer’s disease, FFQ, Food Frequency Questionnaire; MIS, Memory Impairment Screen; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; NYU, New York University; TICS-m, modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status.
Summary of studies on vitamin D supplementation and blood measurements in AD.
| Vitamin | Study Design | Participants [ | Assessment | Intervention/ | Duration | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| INTERVENTION | |||||||
| D | randomized double-blinded placebo-controlled trial | 4144/>65 | WHIMS, MMSE | 1000 mg of calcium carbonate + 400 IU of | 8 years | (−) no association between treatment and incident cognitive impairment | [ |
| MEASUREMENTS | |||||||
| D | cross-sectional study | 146/79.1 ± 7.0 | MMSE | 25(OH)D serum level | 1 measurement | (+) higher serum 25(OH)D level are associated with MMSE score | [ |
| D | cross-sectional study | 208/79 ± 1 | MMSE, CDR | serum 25-hidroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels | 1 year | (+) low vitamin D are associated with cognitive decline | [ |
| D | randomized controlled trial | 1154/79.7 ± 8.4 | MMSE | serum levels of 25(OH)D | 8 years | (+) low levels are associated with cognitive decline | [ |
| D | cohort study | 2990/76.5 ± 3.9 | MMSE-KC, Test Digit Span | 25(OH)D serum level | 2 years | (−) no relationship between vitamin D levels and cognition | [ |
| D | cohort study | 661/≥65 | 3MS | Plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D | 10 years | (+) higher 25(OH)D concentrations increase risk of dementia and AD in women | [ |
| D | retrospective, longitudinal cohort study | 299/61 ± 10, 66 ± 8 | MMSE | 28 nutritional biomarkers in blood and 5 in cerebrospinal fluid, including 1.25(OH)2 | 2–5 years | (+) high vitamin D is associated with cognitive decline | [ |
(+)—confirmed or (−)—no confirmed association of intervention/concentration measurement/consumption with Alzheimer’s disease, 3MS, Modified Mini-Mental State; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating scale; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; MMSE-KC, Mini-Mental State Examination in the Korean version; WHIMS, Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study.
A review of meta-analyses and systematic reviews of recent years on the effects of nutrition on AD.
| Factors | Type of Analysis | Results | Year | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VITAMINS | ||||
| Vitamins B6, B12, and folate | systematic review and meta-analysis: 8 cross-sectional, 13 longitudinal | No link between the concentration of vitamin B in the blood and the risk of cognitive disorders. | 2020 | [ |
| Vitamins B | meta-analysis: 11 large studies | Lowering homocysteine levels through vitamin B supplementation does not improve cognitive function. | 2016 | [ |
| Folic acid, vitamin B12 | meta-analysis: 68 studies | High homocysteine levels and low levels of folic acid and vitamin B12 increase the risk of AD. | 2015 | [ |
| Vitamins C, E, and β-carotene | meta-analysis: 7 studies | Consumption of vitamins E, C, and β-carotene reduces the risk of AD. Vitamin E is the strongest predictor. | 2012 | [ |
| Vitamin D | meta-analysis: 12 prospective cohort studies, 4 cross-sectional studies | Vitamin D deficiency increases the risk of dementia and AD. | 2019 | [ |
| Vitamin D | meta-analysis: 6 prospective cohort studies | Serum vitamin D deficiency is associated with the risk of AD. | 2019 | [ |
| Vitamin D | meta-analysis: 7 prospective cohort studies, 1 retrospective cohort study | Higher levels of 25(OH)D reduce the risk of AD. | 2019 | [ |
| Vitamin E | meta-analysis: 31 observational studies and clinical trial | Lower | 2019 | [ |
| Vitamin E | meta-analysis: 17 studies | Lower vitamin E levels are associated with the risk of AD. | 2018 | [ |
| OTHER NUTRITIONAL FACTORS | ||||
| Fatty acids, foods rich in polyphenols | systematic review: 10 randomized clinical trials | Fatty acids and products rich in flavonoid are a protective factor in the development of dementia | 2020 | [ |
| Ketogenic diet | systematic review: 10 randomized clinical trials | MCT and other ketogenic therapies improve cognition | 2020 | [ |
| Meat consumption | systematic review and meta-analysis (PRISMA): 10 studies | No association between meat consumption and cognitive impairment | 2020 | [ |
| Mediterranean diet | systematic review: 7 randomized clinical trials, 38 longitudinal studies | The diet is a protective factor to cognitive decline | 2020 | [ |
| Nutritional formulas, fatty acid, ginseng, inositol, probiotics | systematic review: 32 randomized clinical trials | Interventions protect or delay the progression of cognitive decline | 2020 | [ |
| Supplementation (vitamins B, vitamins E, omega-3 fatty acids, nutritional formulas) | systematic review and meta-analyses (PRISMA): 4 randomized clinical trials | No significant link between supplementation and cognitive function | 2020 | [ |
| Traditional, healthy diet | systematic review and meta-analysis: 12 studies | Healthy diet reduces the risk of dementia | 2020 | [ |
| Pro-inflammatory diet | systematic review and meta-analysis (PRISMA): 10 randomized clinical trials | Inflammatory diet is associated with cognitive decline | 2019 | [ |
| Traditional, healthy diet and high-fat, high-glycemic diet | systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA): 26 studies | Healthy diet protects against the development of AD, unhealthy diet increases neurodegeneration | 2019 | [ |
MCT, Medium Chain Trigliceryde.