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Vitamin E and cognitive decline in older persons.

Martha Clare Morris, Denis A Evans, Julia L Bienias, Christine C Tangney, Robert S Wilson
Other Archives of neurology 2002 354 اقتباسات
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

نوع الدراسة
Cohort Study
المجتمع المدروس
Community-dwelling older persons
المدة
312 weeks
التدخل
Vitamin E and cognitive decline in older persons. Vitamin E intake
المقارن
Lower vitamin E intake
النتيجة الأولية
Rate of cognitive decline
اتجاه التأثير
Positive
خطر التحيز
Moderate

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous studies raise the possibility that antioxidants protect against neurodegenerative diseases. OBJECTIVE: To examine whether intake of antioxidant nutrients, including vitamin E, vitamin C, and carotene, is associated with reduced cognitive decline with age. DESIGN: Longitudinal population-based study conducted from September 17, 1993, to November 20, 2000, with an average follow-up of 3.2 years. PATIENTS: The patients were 2889 community residents, aged 65 to 102 years, who completed a food frequency questionnaire, on average 18 months after baseline. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Cognitive change as measured by 4 tests (the East Boston Memory Test, which tests immediate and delayed recall; the Mini-Mental State Examination; and the Symbol Digit Modalities Test) at baseline and 3 years for all participants, and at 6 months for 288 randomly selected participants. RESULTS: We used random-effects models to estimate nutrient effects on individual change in the average score of the 4 cognitive tests. The cognitive score declined on average by 5.0 x 10(-2) standardized units per year. There was a 36% reduction in the rate of decline among persons in the highest quintile of total vitamin E intake (-4.3 x 10(-2) standardized units per year) compared with those in the lowest quintile (-6.7 x 10(-2) standardized units per year) (P =.05), in a model adjusted for age, race, sex, educational level, current smoking, alcohol consumption, total calorie (energy) intake, and total intakes of vitamin C, carotene, and vitamin A. We also observed a reduced decline with higher vitamin E intake from foods (P =.03 for trend). There was little evidence of association with vitamin C or carotene intake. CONCLUSION: Vitamin E intake, from foods or supplements, is associated with less cognitive decline with age.

باختصار

Vitamin E intake, from foods or supplements, is associated with less cognitive decline with age, and there was little evidence of association with vitamin C or carotene intake.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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