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Cognitive Impairment Study Shows Berries Significantly Slow Degeneration

Posted: 04/26/2012 12:01 am Updated: 04/26/2012 8:56 am

Cognitive Impairment

Consuming berries regularly may help curb cognitive decline among older adults, a new study finds. It suggests that eating one or more servings of blueberries or two or more servings of strawberries each week may help slow cognitive degeneration by several years.

"This is major step forward because little research previously has explored the effects of berries and flavonoids on memory in older adults," said Dr. Elizabeth Devore of Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, which co-authored the study. "This is the first study of its kind -- the first large, epidemiologic study of berry intake in relation to memory decline."

Devore called the findings "exciting" because they suggest that "a simple dietary modification may provide memory benefits for older adults."

In the study, published Thursday in the Annals of Neurology, researchers used a sample of more than 16,000 women from the Nurses' Health Study, one of the longest ongoing studies looking at women's health in the U.S. The average age of the women sampled was 74.

After analyzing data on the participants' cognitive function, measured at two-year intervals, as well as their food consumption over the years, researchers concluded that women with highest intake of berries delayed their cognitive aging by as much as two-and-a-half years.

"If you can delay the onset by six months, let alone two or more years, the overall global impact on public health is immeasurable," said Dr. Richard Isaacson, an associate professor of neurology at the University of Miami School of Medicine. Cognitive decline develops over many years and could be a sign of future dementia and Alzheimer's -- a disease that the Alzheimer's Association says affects more than 5.4 million people in the U.S.

The authors of the new study state that flavonoids, a type of antioxidant, may be underlying the connection -- in particular, anthocyanidins, which are particularly prevalent in blueberries and strawberries. They cite prior research suggesting that those berry-derived flavonoids are uniquely capable of localizing in regions of the brain that control memory.

"But we also found that greater intakes of total flavonoids were associated with slower decline in memory," Devore said. "So it appears that consuming a wider range of flavonoid-rich foods (e.g., tea, apples, oranges) might be helpful for memory as well."

Of course, the new study is not without limitations. Because it was observational, researchers were unable to rule out the possibility that other lifestyle characteristics, such as physical activity and income, might have influenced rates of memory decline. Devore said that additional studies are now needed to confirm the results in other populations.

The research is not the first to link cognitive degeneration and nutrition. In recent years, numerous studies have questioned the role of diet in cognitive decline, with researchers focusing on the role that the Mediterranean diet may play in reducing the risk of mild cognitive impairment. Another recent study found that adults who eat up to 6,000 calories per day may have double the risk of developing mild cognitive impairment, a type of memory loss.

For now, it is impossible to know exactly how long one needs to consume a flavonoid-rich diet in order to see the potential cognitive benefits, but experts say they are heartened by the possible positive effects of eating such foods.

"We don't have enough data to answer that question," said Isaacson. "But people can begin to change what they eat tomorrow and have an incremental change on their brain."

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02:04 PM on 04/29/2012
Early cognitive decline is definitely a significant clue about the possible onset of Alzheimer's. On going periodic monitoring of our brain health should be a standard practice. A new science focus in Alzheimer's is early detection. With early detection we may be able to delay onset and find causation. Cooperation amongst neuroscientists is also critical and in this regard, at ABVSciences.com, we have developed an online development tool we are crowd funding to launch globally so we can help find cures and treatments and causation faster. If you are interested check out neuroaccelerator.org. and leave comments or share or help. We think working together is a more powerful research tool.
Thanks
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
10:59 PM on 04/26/2012
Blueberries help restore collagen in the skin. They actually rebuild skin cells. If you can get your hands on wild ones.... eat as many as you can. Blueberry juice concentrate can be bought at European stores....and added to a nice glass of cold water.

Get your antioxidants people.....they fight cancer.
OverseasVet
stuck in a 3rd world country called texas
04:34 AM on 04/30/2012
How absurd. Where is the pubmed citation?
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
10:54 PM on 04/26/2012
This, I think, may be my favorite food of all time. All berries... especially those tiny little wild strawberries and blueberries, raspberries, black berries, gooseberries, wine berries, and of course the little known mulberries. So, so, soooo delicious.

I can't wait to go berry picking up north this summer again!!!
08:41 PM on 04/26/2012
Strawberries are not really berries. Very fuzzy conclusion here.
05:51 PM on 04/26/2012
the real brain food is cod liver oil that has NATURAL vitamins A & D...not the fortified kind.
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henriette and hube
my goal is to live each day
05:32 PM on 04/26/2012
The problem though is that when these reports come up, people think they can continue eating junk food and a lousy diet and add blueberries and or strawberries and it doesn't work that way. You have to change your diet AND include blueberries and or strawberries.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ligligl
feelthy liberal! ...and not just a pretty face!
01:32 PM on 04/26/2012
Another 'study' where there are no definitive results...
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
10:55 PM on 04/26/2012
It's kind of become the HP way.
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allyson notally
More right than left but more left than right.
12:31 PM on 04/26/2012
Good thing I bought berries on sale yesterday at my grocery store! Time to get the cognitive regeneration going!
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henriette and hube
my goal is to live each day
05:34 PM on 04/26/2012
Just hope they were organic or the chemical sprays will get you. Sorry to interject the truth here.
08:42 PM on 04/26/2012
1) "organic" strawberries are often grown in adjacent fields to sprayed strawberries. 2) modern commercial strawberries are bloated, starchy hybrids.
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allyson notally
More right than left but more left than right.
09:16 AM on 04/27/2012
Sadly they were not organic. Good news though, the only crop that is producing right now in my raised garden is my strawberry plants. First picking was yesterday evening, and they tasted wonderful (and did not look like fruit boulders). I need to buy about 8 more plants so next year I can have barrels of berries!
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BeerLover
Carpe Diem!
10:56 PM on 04/26/2012
Berries are heavily sprayed with chemicals....so please try to buy organic. Most are grown in warm regions like Florida and are so sprayed with pesticides, that I refuse to buy them. I drive 20 miles east to pick my own at an organic hydro farm. They taste so much better too!
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SteveC 1979
Just...don't.
09:08 AM on 04/26/2012
Further support that berries are one of the best things you can eat. Every food shopping trip of mine always includes a package of strawberries and raspberries, and usually blueberries and blackberries, too. As an added bonus to the clear health benefits, they also taste awesome.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ericthehalfabee
08:43 AM on 04/26/2012
The USDA has also conducted a number of experiments and shown that blueberry extract can actually REVERSE the symptoms of Alzheimers. I write about this and a number of other secrets of longevity in my books on health and self-development called The Path. Most of the science is cutting-edge, by Nobel-prizewinning scientists like Drs. Elizabeth Blackburn and Eric Kandel. Please have a look! http://getonthepath.blogspot.jp/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
guitartapper
PC is Social PCP
07:51 AM on 04/26/2012
Berry growers are loving this....
ItsGettingWeird
(or is it just me?)
06:53 AM on 04/26/2012
Soviet Premier Nikita Kruschev at the UN in 1961:

"We Will Berry You!"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tomtom2
SomeOligarchs need a good old fashion Vulcan Pinch
11:46 AM on 04/26/2012
It took awhile but it proves he was right. Even the health industry is jumping on the bandwagon.
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12:50 PM on 04/26/2012
"We Will Rock You!" - Queen, 1977.
06:41 AM on 04/26/2012
so what this really is saying, if i may be so bold as to infer, is that the regular diet we eat is full or oxidizing compounds that is eating us from the inside out, and playing havoc with our brains as we get older. this makes me sick because it is yet another clue that the world we have built was built on simple-minded ideas pushed way out of shape in order to make a bunch of money for some people.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
yellowdoggie
Level 1 Baggerese Translator
06:38 AM on 04/26/2012
I buy big bags of individually frozen blueberries at Sam's. They defrost quickly and are good in oatmeal or with plain yogurt. They don't go bad before I can eat 'em.
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01:06 PM on 04/26/2012
My favorite breakfast:
Rolled oats
Add 1 tbsp milled flaxseed, mix
Top with frozen berries
Nuke for 30-60 seconds to just thaw the berries, shouldn't get warm
Add plain yogurt and a little milk
Stir and let it sit for about three minutes so the oats soften a bit
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henriette and hube
my goal is to live each day
05:37 PM on 04/26/2012
My favorite version is:
steel cut oats
groats
soaked over night in water

cook for a few minutes the next morning, add frozen blueberries, cook another minute to warm the berries, stir in cinnamon, good for you in many ways, add a tble ground flaxseed and add a bit of Wildwood plain soy milk. Perfection in MMHO.
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straightuptalker
What ever happened to common sense?
04:44 AM on 04/26/2012
And this comes after the announcement that strawberries are no.3 on the "worst fruits to eat" list due to pesticide contamination, apples being no. 1, followed by celery, peaches and spinach. Although organic fruits are safer, they're still contaminated. The strawberry growers obviously aren't happy about that news, so it makes me wonder about this new study. Blueberries weren't on the contaminated list, so there's still hope to protect our brains from atrophy. Could we arrange to deliver a few hundred truckloads of blueberries to Washington?
06:42 AM on 04/26/2012
grow your own … look for self-watering container on wikipedia, it costs a few bucks … make one and grow your own berries.
12:29 PM on 04/26/2012
I believe the research was done with all conventionally grown strawberries. The list referenced is not really based on valid, peer-reviewed, scientific analysis: see www.safefruitsandveggies.com.
10:17 AM on 04/28/2013
Appreciate the link. Interesting reading.