Intake of flavonoids and risk of dementia

Auteur(s) :
Renaud S., Commenges D., Dartigues JF., Jacqmin-gadda H., Scotet V., Barberger-Gateau P.
Date :
Avr, 2000
Source(s) :
European journal of epidemiology. #16:4 p357-363
Adresse :
"COMMENGES D,INSERM,U330;146 RUE LEO SAIGNAT;F-33076 BORDEAUX, FRANCE. [email protected] "

Sommaire de l'article

« It has been postulated that oxidative stress may play a key role in dementia. This is substantiated by the recent discovery of the protective effect of wine. In wine, the flavonoids – powerful antioxidant substances also contained in tea, fruits and vegetables – have been thought to offer such protection. We investigated whether flavonoid intake could be associated with a lower incidence of dementia in a cohort of 1367 subjects above 65 years of age (Paquid). A questionnaire was used to evaluate their intake of flavonoids and subjects were followed-up for 5 years between 1991 and 1996: 66 incident cases of dementia were observed. We estimated the relative risk (RR) of dementia according to tertiles of flavonoid intake using a Cox model. The age-adjusted RR of dementia was 0.55 for the two highest tertiles compared to the lowest (95% CI: 0.34-0.90; p = 0.02). After additional adjustment for gender, education, weight and vitamin C intake, the RR was 0.49 (95% CI: 0.26-0.92; p = 0.04). We conclude that the intake of antioxidant flavonoids is inversely related to the risk of incident dementia. « 

Source : Pubmed
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