By Patrick Holford
Life is a balancing act between making energy by combusting glucose or ketones with oxygen, which generates ‘oxidant’ exhaust fumes and dealing with these ‘oxidant fumes’ which harm the body.
Skin goes crinkly, age spots develop all due to oxidation. That’s what makes apples go brown, leaves change colour and iron rust. In the end, we lose, which is why all oxygen-based life forms have a finite life – and why your brain and body do inevitably age.
However, you can not only add years to your life, but also life to your years by improving your intake of antioxidants and polyphenols found in whole foods, fruits, vegetables and herbs and spices. A study in Finland and Sweden compared those with a ‘healthy’ versus ‘unhealthy’ diet in mid-life for future risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease and dementia 14 years later. Those who ate the healthiest diet had an 86-90% decreased risk of developing dementia and a 90-92% decreased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease. Some of the benefit comes from low sugar diets, high in omega-3 and B vitamins and some from foods high in antioxidants and polyphenols which we will focus on here.
Your intake of these versus your intake and generation of oxidants, for example from smoking and pollution, is a major determinant of brain health. An illustration of this is the fact that both smoking and pollution exposure increase risk of cognitive decline and dementia, while vitamin C, which is the antioxidant par excellence, reduces risk.
(This is why we have developed our brand new Glutathione at home blood test – the first of its kind where you can accurately test your antioxidant status from home and support our further research into this important area. You can find out more and pre order the test here )
Oxidants vs antioxidants – moving the balance in your favour
Smoking increases risk of Alzheimer’s just as much as having low B vitamin or omega-3 status, according to the US National Institute of health’s analysis. Smoking is something a person can easily change. Air pollution, for many, is not. It is measured in the amount of particulate matter (PMs) and people living in polluted cities are exposed to more. A study of women living in cities in the US found that those exceeding the ‘safe’ levels (greater than 12 μg/m3) had ‘increased the risks for global cognitive decline and all-cause dementia respectively by 81% and 92%’.
While you may not be able to change where you live, can you mitigate the effects of pollution? The answer is yes – in two ways. Firstly, by increasing your intake of antioxidants and also by improving your B vitamin status since the body detoxifies many toxins, including toxic metals from lead to mercury, by methylation.
Go Rainbow, ‘Mediterranean’ and eat five or more servings of fruit and vegetables a day
So, what do you need to eat and drink to preserve your memory and protect your brain?
Basically, eat a Mediterranean style ‘rainbow coloured’ diet. A Mediterranean diet has more fish, less meat and dairy, more olive oil, fruit and vegetables including tomatoes, legumes (beans and lentils) and whole grain cereals than a standard Western diet. It also includes small quantities of red wine. There are variations of this kind of diet, called the MIND diet and the DASH diet, but the core components are the same and as researchers drill down, we are learning what to eat and drink to keep your mind sharp and brain young, and how much.
The trick is to really start thinking of the colours you’re eating and gravitate for the strong colours.
Mustard and turmeric, for example, are strong yellows. Dijon mustard is great – no sugar. But if you like good old-fashioned English mustard go for it. Have a teaspoon every other day.
Add turmeric to almost any steam-fry, curry or soup.
Bright oranges include butternut squash, sweet potato, carrots – but do buy organic. Translucent mass produced carrots are tasteless and have a higher water content, ie less actual carrot.
Tomatoes are particularly good for you. Buy seeded, not seedless watermelons. Blend the flesh in a blender, perhaps with some ice. The black husk of the seeds drops to the bottom. The flesh of the seeds, full of essential nutrients, becomes part of this mouth-wateringly refreshing drink. Great for detox. Strawberries are a low GL fruit. Red, yellow, green and orange peppers are all rich in vitamin C.
Anything purple, magenta or blue is brilliant for you. From beetroots (eat them raw, grated into salads) to blueberries, blackberries and raspberries. Strawberries are particularly good. According to a study, part of the Rush Memory and Aging Project at Rush University, Chicago, having a higher intake cut Alzheimer’s risk by a quarter. They are high in both vitamin C and flavanoids, a high level of which were also confirmed to cut risk by a third.
Strong greens are always beneficial – from spinach, kale, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, tender stem, watercress, rocket, asparagus, artichoke, green beans, peas, kohlrabi, and cauliflower (although not green).