Jan 25 (Reuters) - Hopes that a Mediterranean diet would be  as good for the head as it is for the heart may have been  dampened by a French study that found little benefit for aging  brains from the diet rich in fruit, vegetables, whole grains,  nuts, wine and olive oil.                
The study, published in the American Journal of Clinical  Nutrition, looked at the participants' dietary patterns in  middle age and measured their cognitive performance at around  age 65, but found no connection between Mediterranean eating and  mental performance.                
"Our study does not support the hypothesis of a significant  neuroprotective effect of a (Mediterranean diet) on cognitive  function," wrote study leader Emmanuelle Kesse-Guyot at the  nutritional epidemiology research center of the French national  health research agency INSERM.                
It's been suggested that the "good" fats in the  Mediterranean diet might benefit the brain directly, or that low  saturated fats and high fiber in the diet could help stave off  cognitive decline indirectly by keeping blood vessels healthy.                
Previous research has seemed to uphold that premise.                
One large study in the U.S. Midwest, for example, found that  people in their 60s and older who ate a mostly Mediterranean  diet were less prone to mental decline as they aged. Another  study of residents of Manhattan linked a Mediterranean-style  diet to a 40 percent lower risk of Alzheimer's disease.                
Researchers in the French study used data on 3,083 people  who were followed from the mid-1990s, when they were at least 45  years old.                
At the beginning of the study, participants recorded what  they ate over one 24-hour period every two months, for a total  of six dietary record samples per year. Then, between 2007 and  2009 when the participants were about 65 years old, their memory  and other mental abilities were measured.                
Researchers then separated participants into three  categories depending on how closely they adhered to a  Mediterranean-style diet, and compared their mental ability test  scores.                
Overall, they found that people who ate a diet closest to  the Mediterranean ideal performed about the same as those who  ate a non-restricted diet.                
Nikos Scarmeas, who was not involved with the study but has  researched the effects of food on brain health, said it's  important to note that the new study had some limitations.                
For instance, researchers only tested the participants'  mental abilities once, making it impossible to track whether  they got better or worse over time, added Scarmeas, an associate  professor at New York's Columbia University Medical Center.                
"We don't have the strong evidence to go and tell  people,'Listen, if you follow this diet, it will improve  cognition,'" he said.  SOURCE: http://bit.ly/UZyTWG     (Reporting from New York by Andrew Seaman at Reuters Health;  editing by Elaine Lies)
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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/25/mediterranean-diet-brain-aging-_n_2546721.html
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