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Want to avoid memory difficulties in old age? Switch to a Mediterranean diet

A Mediterranean diet includes 15 types of foods, ten of which are considered ‘brain-healthy’. It helps you boost your memory and attention skills.

Updated on: Jul 26, 2017 04:35 PM IST
Asian News International, Washington DC | By
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If you love Mediterranean cuisine, rejoice! While past research has shown that a Mediterranean diet (rich in fresh fruits, vegetables, protein-rich legumes and whole grains) may cut colorectal cancer risk by 86%, and may help treat HIV, diabetes patients, new research highlights more benefits. It could lower the risk of memory difficulties, suggests a study. The results suggested that older people who ate a Mediterranean-style diet had 35% lower risk of scoring poorly on cognitive tests. Even those who ate a moderate Mediterranean-style diet had 15% lower risk of doing poorly on cognitive tests.

A Mediterranean diet is rich in fresh fruits and vegetables, high on lean protein and low on refined sugars and saturated fats. (Shutterstock)
A Mediterranean diet is rich in fresh fruits and vegetables, high on lean protein and low on refined sugars and saturated fats. (Shutterstock)

This study suggests that eating Mediterranean and MIND-style diets is linked to better overall cognitive function in older adults, said the researchers. The Mediterranean diet is rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans, potatoes, nuts, olive oil and fish. Processed foods, fried and fast foods, snack foods, red meat, poultry and whole-fat dairy foods are infrequently eaten on the Mediterranean diet.

The MIND diet is a version of the Mediterranean diet that includes 15 types of foods. Ten are considered “brain-healthy:” green leafy vegetables, other vegetables, nuts, berries, beans, whole grains, seafood, poultry, olive oil, and wine. Five are considered unhealthy: red meat, butter and stick margarine, cheese, pastries, sweets and fried/fast foods. Researchers examined information from 5,907 older adults who participated in the Health and Retirement Study.

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