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Adherence to the Mediterranean diet Is not related to beta-amyloid deposition: data from the Women's Healthy Ageing Project
Objectives: To investigate the association between Mediterranean diet adherence and beta-amyloid deposition in a cohort of healthy older Australian women.
Design: This study was a cross-sectional investigation of participants from the longitudinal, epidemiologically sourced Women's Healthy Ageing Project which is a follow-up of the Melbourne Women's Midlife Health Project.
Setting: Assessments were conducted at the Centre for Medical Research, Royal Melbourne Hospital in Melbourne, Australia. F-18 Florbetaben positron emission tomography scanning was conducted at the Austin Centre for PET in Victoria, Australia.
Participants: One hundred and eleven Women's Healthy Ageing Project participants were included in the study.
Measurements: Mediterranean diet adherence scores for all participants were calculated from the administration of a validated food frequency questionnaire constructed by the Cancer Council of Victoria. Beta-amyloid deposition was measured using positron emission tomography standardised uptake value ratios.
Results: Gamma regression analysis displayed no association between Mediterranean diet adherence and beta-amyloid deposition. This result was consistent across APOE-ε4 +/- cohorts and with the inclusion of covariates such as age, education, body mass index and cognition.
Conclusions: This study found no association between adherence to the Mediterranean diet and beta-amyloid deposition in a cohort of healthy Australian women.
History
Publication title
Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's DiseaseVolume
5Pagination
137-141ISSN
2274-5807Department/School
Menzies Institute for Medical ResearchPublisher
Editions SERDIPlace of publication
FranceRepository Status
- Restricted