Abstract

Diet quality plays an important role in dementia prevention. It remains unclear how the joint effect of vegetable variety and diet quality affects cognition. This study aimed to explore the association of diet quality and vegetable variety with cognitive decline in older adults. This prospective cohort study (2011–2015) included 436 community-dwelling elders in Taipei. Diet quality, assessed by the modified Alternative Healthy Eating Index (mAHEI), was computed from a food frequency questionnaire at baseline (2011–2013). Vegetable variety indicated the number of different vegetable groups, adjusted for vegetable quantity. Multivariable linear and logistic regression models were used to explore the association of diet quality and vegetable variety with the decline of global and domain-specific cognition over two years. Our findings suggest that high diet quality (the highest tertile of mAHEI) was associated with a lower risk of both global cognitive decline (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 0.54, confidence interval (CI) = 0.31–0.95) and decline of attention domain (AOR = 0.56, CI = 0.32–0.99) compared with low diet quality. In elders with high vegetable variety, high diet quality was associated with a lower risk of global cognitive decline (AOR = 0.49, CI = 0.26–0.95). We therefore concluded that high diet quality along with diverse vegetable intake was associated with a lower risk of cognitive decline in older adults.

Highlights

  • As the global population ages rapidly, dementia has become an essential public health concern as it places a substantial burden on society as a whole

  • Among 436 participants included for statistical analyses, the modified Alternative Healthy Eating Index (mAHEI) score ranged from 17.2 to 57.3, with a mean of 36.5

  • For participants with high vegetable diversity (T2 + T3), high diet quality was associated with a lower risk of global cognitive decline (AOR = 0.49, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.26–0.95, ptrend = 0.03) compared with low diet quality

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Summary

Introduction

As the global population ages rapidly, dementia has become an essential public health concern as it places a substantial burden on society as a whole. Mild cognitive impairment (MCI), characterized by objective cognitive decline in older adults but with the preservation of daily functioning, is viewed as a transition stage between normal cognitive aging and dementia [1,2]. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the leading cause [1,3]. A large survey in Taiwan (2011–2013) reported that the age–gender-adjusted prevalence was 18.78% for MCI and 8.13% for all-cause dementia in older adults (age ≥ 65 years) [5]. The disease pathogenesis cannot be altered, and will eventually lead to death [3,6]

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