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Eating fish helps keep older
people's brains sharp
New York -
Eating fish appears to knock a few years off your mental age --
in a good way.
Elderly people who ate fish at least
once a week had the mental functioning of a person three years younger
than their chronological age, while those who ate fish twice weekly or
more turned the clock back four years.
"It appears as if it's helping to
keep the brain healthy," Dr. Martha Clare Morris of Rush University
Medical Center in Chicago, the study's lead author, told Reuters
Health.
Seafood is rich in omega-3 acids. One
of these acids in particular, docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), is essential
for the development of the brain in early life, she explained. More
recent research suggests DHA may be key for people at the other end of
the age spectrum as well, she added.
"It does look like it's as important
as well in old age, or maybe just in general, for brain functioning,"
Morris said.
In the current study, she and her
colleagues followed 3,718 people 65 and older for six years. All were
interviewed at home three times in the course of the study.
Participants who ate fish once a week
showed a 10% slower decline in their mental function, equivalent to a
three-year reduction in mental age, while eating fish twice a week or
more slowed the decline by 13%, equivalent to four years.
A separate analysis of omega-3 fatty
acid consumption did not find it affected cognitive function, but
Morris said this may have been because their information was not
precise enough. She and her colleagues have launched another study to
look specifically at the effect of these nutrients on mental function.
Nevertheless, she adds, the findings
do suggest eating fish protects the brain, either through its own
fatty acid content or by knocking foods high in saturated fat, like
red meat, off the menu. --
Reuters
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