2015
DOI: 10.1007/s12603-014-0534-0
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Nutrient patterns and brain biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease in cognitively normal individuals

Abstract: Objectives Epidemiological evidence linking diet, one of the most important modifiable lifestyle factors, and risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is rapidly increasing. However, there is little or no evidence for a direct association between dietary nutrients and brain biomarkers of AD. This study identifies nutrient patterns associated with major brain AD biomarkers in a cohort of clinically and cognitively normal (NL) individuals at risk for AD. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting Manhattan (broader area)… Show more

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Cited by 129 publications
(93 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
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“…Towards this direction, the PCA provided three nutrient factors: the ''plant oil factor'', the ''vegetable/fruit factor'', and the ''animal food factor''. It must be noted that similar trends were observed in previous studies aiming at identifying dietary patterns based on nutrients ( (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bravi et al, 2010), ''unsaturated fats'' (Bosetti et al, 2013;Edefonti et al, 2008), or ''vitamin E and PUFA'' (Berti et al, 2014). Consistent with our ''vegetable/fruit factor'', the ''vitamins and fiber'' (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bosetti et al, 2013;Bravi et al, 2010;Edefonti et al, 2008) and ''antioxidants and fiber'' (Berti et al, 2014) factors are reported in the literature.…”
Section: Nutrient Factors and Their Functional Role On Cvd Risksupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Towards this direction, the PCA provided three nutrient factors: the ''plant oil factor'', the ''vegetable/fruit factor'', and the ''animal food factor''. It must be noted that similar trends were observed in previous studies aiming at identifying dietary patterns based on nutrients ( (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bravi et al, 2010), ''unsaturated fats'' (Bosetti et al, 2013;Edefonti et al, 2008), or ''vitamin E and PUFA'' (Berti et al, 2014). Consistent with our ''vegetable/fruit factor'', the ''vitamins and fiber'' (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bosetti et al, 2013;Bravi et al, 2010;Edefonti et al, 2008) and ''antioxidants and fiber'' (Berti et al, 2014) factors are reported in the literature.…”
Section: Nutrient Factors and Their Functional Role On Cvd Risksupporting
confidence: 89%
“…It must be noted that similar trends were observed in previous studies aiming at identifying dietary patterns based on nutrients ( (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bravi et al, 2010), ''unsaturated fats'' (Bosetti et al, 2013;Edefonti et al, 2008), or ''vitamin E and PUFA'' (Berti et al, 2014). Consistent with our ''vegetable/fruit factor'', the ''vitamins and fiber'' (Bertuccio et al, 2009;Bosetti et al, 2013;Bravi et al, 2010;Edefonti et al, 2008) and ''antioxidants and fiber'' (Berti et al, 2014) factors are reported in the literature. Furthermore, in line with our ''animal food factor'', Edefonti et al (2008), Bertuccio et al (2009), Bravi et al (2010, and Bosetti et al (2013) identified the ''animal products'' pattern.…”
Section: Nutrient Factors and Their Functional Role On Cvd Risksupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Multimodality brain imaging studies tested PCA-derived NPs for associations with Aß deposition on PiB-PET, CMRglc on FDG-PET, and gray matter volumes (GMV) on MRI in 25- to 72-year-old cognitively normal adults [75]. Five distinct NPs were extracted from a panel of 35 nutrients related to AD or cognitive function.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, CMRglc and GMV were negatively associated with a second NP characterized by intake of saturated, trans-saturated fats, cholesterol, and sodium. Finally, CMRglc was positively associated with two additional NPs: one characterized by intake of vitamin E, ω-3, and ω-6 PUFA, and the other by intake of vitamin A, vitamin C, several carotenoids (α- and β-carotene, β-cryptoxanthin, lutein, zeaxanthin), and dietary fibers [75]. The identified “brain-protective” NPs were correlated to higher intake of vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, low fat dairies, and nuts, and lower intake of sweets, fried potatoes, processed meat, high-fat dairies, and butter [75] (Fig.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…that was associated with reduced brain atrophy) was linked to higher intake of fish and low-fat dairy products and lower intake of high-fat dairies, processed meat and butter (23).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%