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Midlife Coffee And Tea Drinking May Protect Against Late-life Dementia

Dr. Perlmutter’s comment:
Thank goodness!!

From sciencedaily.com
This study has been conducted at the University of Kuopio, Finland in collaboration with Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, and the National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland. The study included participants from the survivors of population-based cohorts previously surveyed within the North Karelia Project and the FINMONICA study in 1972, 1977, 1982 or 1987 (midlife visit). After an average follow-up of 21 years, 1409 individuals (71%) aged 65 to 79 completed the re-examination in 1998. A total of 61 cases were identified as demented (48 with AD).

“We aimed to study the association between coffee and tea consumption at midlife and dementia/AD risk in late-life, because the long-term impact of caffeine on the central nervous system was still unknown, and as the pathologic processes leading to Alzheimer’s disease may start decades before the clinical manifestation of the disease,” says lead researcher, associate professor Miia Kivipelto, from the University of Kuopio, Finland and Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

At the midlife examination, the consumption of coffee and tea was assessed with a previously validated semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire. Coffee drinking was categorized into three groups: 0-2 cups (low), 3-5 cups (moderate) and >5 cups (high) per day. Further, the question concerning tea consumption was dichotomized into those not drinking tea (0 cup/day) vs. those drinking tea (?1 cup/day).

The study found that coffee drinkers at midlife had lower risk for dementia and AD later in life compared to those drinking no or only little coffee. The lowest risk (65% decreased) was found among moderate coffee drinkers (drinking 3-5 cups of coffee/day). Adjustments for various confounders did not change the results. Tea drinking was relatively uncommon and was not associated with dementia/AD.

Kivipelto also notes that, “Given the large amount of coffee consumption globally, the results might have important implications for the prevention of or delaying the onset of dementia/AD. The finding needs to be confirmed by other studies, but it opens the possibility that dietary interventions could modify the risk of dementia/AD. Also, identification of mechanisms of how coffee exerts its protection against dementia/AD might help in the development of new therapies for these diseases.”

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Journal reference:

Marjo H. Eskelinen, Tiia Ngandu, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Hilkka Soininen, Miia Kivipelto. Midlife Coffee and Tea Drinking and the Risk of Late-Life Dementia: A Population-based CAIDE Study. Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 16(1), xx-xx

Comments

  1. Evelyn L. Schindler
    April 28th, 2009 at 2:22 pm

    Dear Dr. perlmutter,
    I have just found and finished reading your book
    BrainRecovery.com. How I wish that I would have had the information when my husband was electrocuted at work and fell 10 feet off the ladder he was standing on. This happened in March 2000. He was in a coma for a week, did not have the pressure removed from his brain even though I asked the neurosurgeon about doing so. I now believe that if he had had the pressure removed and the subdural hematoma evacuated he would be alive today. He lived 2 yrs and 2mo. but had 6 brain surgeries to insert then relocate a brain stent to drain the fluid. I now know that the electrocution did much damage to his GI tract and resulted in his medications not being absorbed properly.
    I am an RN and neurology is not my specialty but I have learned a great deal. I am excited that an MD realizes the value of vitamin therapy, etc. in the treatment of disease. So many do not. Your book is a blessing to me as I am sharing the information with friends who have Alzheimers, ALS, etc. Keep up the good work. By the way, I worked at Baptist Hospital of Miami in the 1970′s and left in 1981. I believe you were on staff there.
    Is that possible? Sincerely, Evelyn L. Schindler

  2. Dr. Perlmutter
    May 9th, 2009 at 9:30 am

    Actually, that would have been my dad.

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