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Dietary Fats Help Lower Risk of Dementia and Alzheimer’s

Dietary Fats Help Lower Risk of Dementia and Alzheimer’sThink your low-fat diet is protecting your brain? Think again!  Healthy dietary fats are vital to brain function and the prevention of dementia and Alzheimer’s, and a low-fat diet can deprive your brain of essential nutrients.

Fats make up brain neurons

The fats you eat are broken down into fatty acid molecules, which eventually make up the membranes of cells, including brain cells. Cell membranes determine cellular health. They play a role in communication with other cells, and they control what may enter and exit the cell.

A diet overly low in fat, or overly high in unhealthy fats—the processed vegetable oils, trans fats, and hydrogenated fats commonly found in fast food, junk food, and packaged food—leads to faulty structure of cell membranes. As a result, cellular function and communication suffer, ultimately leading to increased rate of cell death, or degeneration, in the brain.  Also, myelin sheaths, the covers that protect communicating neurons, are composed of 70 percent fat. Again, proper dietary fats ensure these sheaths are healthy so that communication in the brain can function normally and memory function is preserved.

Acetylcholine, dementia, and Alzheimer’s

Sufficient quantities of healthy dietary fats also provide precursors to a brain chemical called acetylcholine. Acetylcholine is necessary for learning, memory, concentration, and focus.

How do you know if you have an acetylcholine deficiency?

If you eat a low-fat diet and your memory isn’t what it used to be, that is a red flag. Do you forget where you parked the car? Or do you have trouble remembering faces? Common symptoms of an acetylcholine deficiency include:

  • Memory loss
  • Memory lapses
  • Loss of visual memory (faces; where the car is parked)
  • Poor comprehension
  • Difficulty learning and retaining new information
  • Difficulty calculating numbers
  • Excessive urination

Recommendations:

  1. Avoid trans-fats to prevent dementia and Alzheimer’s. When eating to protect brain health, avoid bleached and deodorized vegetable oils. Also, vigorously avoid trans fats and hydrogenated oils, which alter the composition of cell membranes and have been shown to increase the risk of Alzheimer’s. Many fried foods, fast foods, and processed foods contain hydrogenated oils, or trans fats.
  2. Consume choline.  The most abundant dietary sources of the acetylcholine precursor – choline – are animal fats: egg yolks, cream, fatty cheeses, fatty fish, fatty meats, and liver. Non-animal sources include avocado and almonds. Although you don’t need to eat them to excess, depriving yourself of healthy fats on a long-term basis can rob you of brain function and increase your risk of dementia and Alzheimer’s.
  3. Focus on omega 3 fats. Omega 3 fats come mainly from raw nuts and seeds, and wild, cold-water fish, such as salmon. Also, consider taking a krill or fish oil supplement to boost your omega 3 fatty acids.
  4. Take supplements that support acetylcholine.  In addition to boosting healthy dietary fat and omega 3 fatty acids, people already suffering from some degree of memory loss may want to boost their acetylcholine levels with nutrients shown to enhance acetylcholine activity. Galantamine has been used for decades in other countries to treat mild to moderate symptoms of dementia and Alzheimer’s. Other nutrients include L-alpha-glycerlphosphorcylcholine (alpha GPC), huperzine, and L-acetylcarnitine.

References:

Braverman, Eric R. The Edge Effect: Reverse or prevent Alzheimer’s, aging, memory loss, weight gain, sexual dysfunction, and more.

Grimm MO, Rothhaar TL, Grosgen S, et al. Trans fatty acids enhance amyloidogenic processing of the Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP). J Nutr Biochem. 2011 Dec. 29. Epub ahead of print.

Posted in Cognitive Decline and Memory Issues.

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