Toronto Metropolitan University
Browse

Dairy Product Consumption and Changes in Cognitive Performance: Two-Year Analysis of the PREDIMED-Plus Cohort

Download (400.77 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-08, 15:46 authored by Jiaqi Ni, Stephanie NishiStephanie Nishi, Nancy Babio, Miguel-Ángel Martínez-González, Dolores Corella, Olga Castañer, J. Alfredo Martínez, Ángel M. Alonso-Gómez, Enrique Gomez-Gracia, Jesús Vioque, Dora Romaguera, Jose López-Miranda, Ramon Estruch, Francisco J. Tinahones, José Lapetra, J. Luís Serra-Majem, Aurora Bueno-Cavanillas, Josep A. Tur, Vicente Martín-Sanchez, Xavier Pintó, José J. Gaforio, Ana Barabash Bustelo, Josep Vidal, Clotilde Vázquez, Lidia Daimiel, Emili Ros, Estefania Toledo, Oscar Coltell, Carlos Gómez-Martínez, María Dolores Zomeño, Carolina Donat VargasCarolina Donat Vargas, Leire Goicolea-Güemez, Cristina Bouzas, Manoli Garcia-de-la-Hera, Alice Chaplin, Antonio García-Rios, Rosa Casas, Isabel Cornejo-Pareja, Jose Manuel Santos-Lozano, Teresa Rognoni, Carmen Saiz, Indira Paz-Graniel, Mireia Malcampo, Almudena Sánchez-Villegas, Itziar Salaverria-Lete, Ana García-Arellano, Helmut Schröder, Jordi Salas-Salvadó, PREDIMED-Plus investigators

Scope

Dairy consumption has been suggested to impact cognition; however, evidence is limited and inconsistent. This study aims to longitudinally assess the association between dairy consumption with cognitive changes in an older Spanish population at high cardiovascular disease risk.

Methods and results

Four thousand six hundred sixty eight participants aged 55–75 years, completed a validated food frequency questionnaire at baseline and a neuropsychological battery of tests at baseline and 2-year follow-up. Multivariable linear regression models are used, scaled by 100 (i.e., the units of β correspond to 1 SD/100), to assess associations between baseline tertile daily consumption and 2-year changes in cognitive performance. Participants in the highest tertile of total milk and whole-fat milk consumption have a greater decline in global cognitive function (β: –4.71, 95% CI: –8.74 to –0.69, p-trend = 0.020 and β: –6.64, 95% CI: –10.81 to –2.47, p-trend = 0.002, respectively) compared to those in the lowest tertile. No associations are observed between low fat milk, yogurt, cheese or fermented dairy consumption, and changes in cognitive performance.

Conclusion

Results suggest there are no clear prospective associations between consumption of most commonly consumed dairy products and cognition, although there may be an association with a greater rate of cognitive decline over a 2-year period in older adults at high cardiovascular disease risk for whole-fat milk.

History

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Faculty of Community Services

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC