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An Apple a Day Keeps Alzheimer's Away

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U appreciate you posting this, GB. I joke about my high chances of

getting Alzheimers since both my grannies and an aunt all suffered

from dementia, but I've been so forgetful recently I was getting

rather worried. I shall be sure to get myself some apples,

blueberries and apple juice tomorrow.

Christie

 

, " Guru K " <greatyoga

wrote:

>

> An Apple a Day Keeps Alzheimer's Away

> Courtesy : Daily Health News.

>

> Until recently, it was generally assumed that fate determined who

> developed Alzheimer's disease (AD) and there was no way to change

it.

> But evidence is mounting that, as with so many other illnesses,

> healthful life choices can improve the odds against AD. The latest

> research is from the University of Massachusetts, Lowell, and

focuses

> on the impact of antioxidants and that yummy childhood standby --

> apple juice.

>

> In the study, mice -- some of which were susceptible to cognitive

> decline -- were given one of three diets. The first was a nutritious

> diet, while both the second and third were nutritionally deficient

> diets. But the third diet was supplemented with apple juice -- the

> equivalent of two 8-ounce glasses of pure apple juice or two to

three

> apples daily. Thomas B. Shea, PhD, the study's lead author,

explained

> to me that the poor diet was to create oxidative stress because this

> would better isolate their response to apple juice. Dr. Shea, who is

> the director of the University of Massachusetts, Lowell Center for

> Cellular Neurobiology and Neurodegeneration Research, described the

> sub-standard diet the mice had as akin to the way most people eat.

>

> After a month (equivalent to a year in human life), the mice were

put

> into a maze to test their cognitive performance. The mice on a

> nutritious diet tested in the 70% to 75% correct range. Mice on a

> deficient diet without apple juice performed at just 50%, but the

mice

> that had a poor diet and apple juice rose to the 75% level,

> establishing the value of the juice.

>

> Further evidence: Dr. Shea says when they tested mice on apple juice

> and a nutritious diet, they achieved a 90% level, higher than any he

> had seen before. The researchers also found that acetylcholine, a

> brain chemical, increased in mice that had apple juice compared with

> those on a deficient diet without the juice. This is critical

because

> acetylcholine plummets in people with AD. In fact, the activity of

> several current AD medications is to prevent the breakdown of

> acetylcholine.

>

> Dr. Shea says that the value here is definitely the antioxidants in

> apples, not a boost from the fruit's natural sugar. But most of

these

> antioxidants aren't specific to apples, he says. You can also get

them

> from blueberries, spinach and probably cranberries as well (though

not

> from diluted or sugar-sweetened cranberry juice cocktail). If you

> prefer apple juice, though, be sure to get pure apple juice, not

apple

> juice cocktail, which is loaded with sugar and contains less juice.

> For those who prefer the fruit, any kind is fine, but always eat the

> skin, the richest store of antioxidants. Be sure you wash it

> thoroughly before eating to reduce pesticides.

>

> This is extremely valuable research. It underscores the probable

role

> of a nutritious diet in combating the risk of AD. As Dr. Shea points

> out, having a weakened form of certain genes likely increases the

risk

> of AD in a person. Antioxidants alone aren't powerful enough to

> strengthen those genes, but having antioxidant- rich foods as part

of

> a sound diet appears to make a big difference in reducing risk of

AD.

>

> Be well,

>

> Carole Jackson

> Bottom Line's Daily Health News

>

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Christie,

 

Both of my grandmas died of Alzheimer's also. Wait! where am I?

They did this study on apples but I suspect that almost any if not all

fruits and veggies have an antioxidant effect on brain cells. Also

eating an alkaline diet.

 

Cheers,

GB

 

, " christie_0131 "

<christie0131 wrote:

>

> U appreciate you posting this, GB. I joke about my high chances of

> getting Alzheimers since both my grannies and an aunt all suffered

> from dementia, but I've been so forgetful recently I was getting

> rather worried. I shall be sure to get myself some apples,

> blueberries and apple juice tomorrow.

> Christie

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