Quantcast
Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 0:10 EDT

Diet reduces Alzheimer’s protein in mice: study

October 24, 2005
Repost This

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Experiments in mice genetically
engineered to develop a form of Alzheimer’s disease show that a
diet high in saturated fats and low in carbohydrates reduces
levels of the protein amyloid-beta in the brain, which is
thought to be one of the key factors in the diseases

Previous studies have suggested that diets rich in
saturated fats increase the deposition of amyloid-beta and
increase the risk of developing Alzheimer’s, Dr. Samuel T.
Henderson and colleagues note in their report in the journal
Nutrition and Metabolism. However, those studies did not
investigate the effect of a high-fat diet that’s also low in
carbohydrates.

In their own experiments, Henderson from Accera, Inc., in
Broomfield, Colorado, and colleagues in Belgium used mice that
produce high levels of amyloid-beta in the brain and extensive
plaque deposition.

Eight of the animals were fed a standard high-carbohydrate
low-fat diet. Another eight mice were fed a diet very low in
carbohydrates and high in fat for 43 days beginning at three
months of age.

Levels of amyloid-beta were significantly reduced — by
about 25 percent — during the high-fat low-carb diet, though
levels were not related to weight change or brain protein
content.

“The data presented here,” Henderson’s group concludes,
“suggested that it may not be fats in the diet that increase
amyloid-beta levels, but perhaps levels of total calories,
carbohydrates, or the metabolic state of the animal.”

SOURCE: Nutrition & Metabolism, October 17, 2005.


Source: