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Researchers link memory loss to diet
high in fat, cholesterol
Loss
of memory with advanced age is a significant problem within most
societies, and appears particularly severe in advanced industrialized
nations. A less visible and often ignored problem comes from a food
supply high in cholesterol and saturated fat, which has led to high
obesity rates particularly in the United States. In a study published
in the June issue of the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, researchers
from MUSC have linked memory loss to a diet high in saturated fat and
cholesterol.
Collaboration between two laboratories at MUSC and one at Arizona State
University led researchers to discover that rodents that were fed a
diet high in cholesterol and saturated fat displayed impairment in
working memory. This memory loss is associated with inflammation in the
brain, as well as the impairment of structural proteins that affect how
a nerve cell functions. As inflammation is associated with a poor diet,
the failure of functions in other key organs such as the eye and the
ear also could be expected.
Assuming that the same phenomenon occurs in human beings, the study
suggests that as humans age, memory may be preserved and brain
functions improved by restricting the consumption of cholesterol and
saturated fats. As cases of obesity and obesity-related diseases have
increased exponentially in the United States, and are second only to
tobacco use for premature mortality and the number of health-care
dollars spent, the importance of this issue is immediate.
“Effects of a Saturated Fat and High Cholesterol Diet on Memory and
Hippocampal Morphology in the Middle-Aged Rat,” authored by
Ann-Charlotte Granholm, Heather A. Bimonte-Nelson, Alfred B. Moore,
Matthew E. Nelson, Linnea Freeman and Kumar Sambamurti, appears in the
Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease 14:2 (June), pp. 133-145.
Editor’s note: For information
contact Maggie Diebolt, at dieboltm@musc.edu.
Friday, June 27, 2008
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