Dietary patterns, cognitive decline, and dementia: a systematic review
- PMID: 25770254
- PMCID: PMC4352174
- DOI: 10.3945/an.114.007617
Dietary patterns, cognitive decline, and dementia: a systematic review
Abstract
Nutrition is an important modifiable risk factor that plays a role in the strategy to prevent or delay the onset of dementia. Research on nutritional effects has until now mainly focused on the role of individual nutrients and bioactive components. However, the evidence for combined effects, such as multinutrient approaches, or a healthy dietary pattern, such as the Mediterranean diet, is growing. These approaches incorporate the complexity of the diet and possible interaction and synergy between nutrients. Over the past few years, dietary patterns have increasingly been investigated to better understand the link between diet, cognitive decline, and dementia. In this systematic review we provide an overview of the literature on human studies up to May 2014 that examined the role of dietary patterns (derived both a priori as well as a posteriori) in relation to cognitive decline or dementia. The results suggest that better adherence to a Mediterranean diet is associated with less cognitive decline, dementia, or Alzheimer disease, as shown by 4 of 6 cross-sectional studies, 6 of 12 longitudinal studies, 1 trial, and 3 meta-analyses. Other healthy dietary patterns, derived both a priori (e.g., Healthy Diet Indicator, Healthy Eating Index, and Program National Nutrition Santé guideline score) and a posteriori (e.g., factor analysis, cluster analysis, and reduced rank regression), were shown to be associated with reduced cognitive decline and/or a reduced risk of dementia as shown by all 6 cross-sectional studies and 6 of 8 longitudinal studies. More conclusive evidence is needed to reach more targeted and detailed guidelines to prevent or postpone cognitive decline.
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; cognitive decline; dementia; dietary pattern; healthy diet.
© 2015 American Society for Nutrition.
Conflict of interest statement
Author disclosures: O van de Rest, AAM Berendsen, A Haveman-Nies, and LCPGM de Groot, no conflicts of interest.
Figures
References
- 
    - Alzheimer's Disease International. Policy brief for heads of government: the global impact of dementia 2013–2050. London: Alzheimer's Disease International; 2013.
 
- 
    - WHO; Alzheimer’s Disease International. Dementia: a public health priority. London: WHO, Alzheimer's Disease International; 2012.
 
- 
    - Hu FB. Dietary pattern analysis: a new direction in nutritional epidemiology. Curr Opin Lipidol 2002;13:3–9. - PubMed
 
- 
    - Jacobs DR, Jr, Steffen LM. Nutrients, foods, and dietary patterns as exposures in research: a framework for food synergy. Am J Clin Nutr 2003;78(3, Suppl):508S–13S. - PubMed
 
- 
    - Jacques PF, Tucker KL. Are dietary patterns useful for understanding the role of diet in chronic disease? Am J Clin Nutr 2001;73:1–2. - PubMed
 
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
- Full Text Sources
- Other Literature Sources
- Medical
- Miscellaneous
 
         
              