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geriatricsAssociation of Long-Term Diet Quality with Hippocampal Volume: Longitudinal Cohort Study

Association of Long-Term Diet Quality with Hippocampal Volume: Longitudinal Cohort Study

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Diet quality is associated with brain aging outcomes. However, few studies have explored in humans the brain structures potentially affected by long-term diet quality. We examined whether cumulative average of the Alternative Healthy Eating Index 2010 (AHEI-2010) score during adult life (an 11-year exposure period) is associated with hippocampal volume.

METHODS

Analyses were based on data from 459 participants of the Whitehall II imaging sub-study (mean age [standard deviation] (SD) = 59.6 [5.3] years in 2002-2004, 19.2% women). Multimodal magnetic resonance imaging examination was performed at the end of follow-up (2015-2016). Structural images were acquired using a high-resolution 3-dimensional T1-weighted sequence and processed with Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain Software Library (FSL) tools. An automated model-based segmentation and registration tool was applied to extract hippocampal volumes.

RESULTS

Higher AHEI-2010 cumulative average score (reflecting long-term healthy diet quality) was associated with a larger total hippocampal volume. For each 1 SD (SD = 8.7 points) increment in AHEI-2010 score, an increase of 92.5 mm3 (standard error = 42.0 mm3) in total hippocampal volume was observed. This association was independent of sociodemographic factors, smoking habits, physical activity, cardiometabolic health factors, cognitive impairment, and depressive symptoms, and was more pronounced in the left hippocampus than in the right hippocampus. Of the AHEI-2010 components, no or light alcohol consumption was independently associated with larger hippocampal volume.

CONCLUSIONS

Higher long-term AHEI-2010 scores were associated with larger hippocampal volume. Accounting for the importance of hippocampal structures in several neuropsychiatric diseases, our findings reaffirm the need to consider adherence to healthy dietary recommendation in multi-interventional programs to promote healthy brain aging.

To read this article in its entirety please visit our website.

-Tasnime Akbaraly, PhD, Claire Sexton, PhD, Enikő Zsoldos, PhD, Abda Mahmood, PhD, Nicola Filippini, PhD, Clarisse Kerleau, MSc, Jean-Michel Verdier, PhD, Marianna Virtanen, PhD, Audrey Gabelle, MD, Klaus P. Ebmeier, MD, FRCPsych, Mika Kivimaki, PhD, FMedSci

This article originally appeared in the November issue of The American Journal of Medicine.

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