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Adherence to nutritional recommendations and subsequent cognitive performance: findings from the prospective Supplementation with Antioxidant Vitamins and Minerals 2 (SU.VI.MAX 2) study.
Kesse-Guyot, E, Amieva, H, Castetbon, K, Henegar, A, Ferry, M, Jeandel, C, Hercberg, S, Galan, P, ,
The American journal of clinical nutrition. 2011;(1):200-10
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Abstract
BACKGROUND Few studies have investigated the long-term effect of overall nutritional recommendations on cognition. OBJECTIVE In a French cohort of middle-aged adults, we evaluated the association between the French National Nutrition and Health Program (Program National Nutrition Santé) Guideline Score (PNNS-GS) assessed at baseline and cognitive performance evaluated 13 y later. DESIGN The PNNS-GS was estimated at baseline (1994-1996) (maximum score: 15 points) in 2135 subjects in the SU.VI.MAX (Supplementation with Antioxidant Vitamins and Minerals) study. We assessed cognitive performance of subjects in 2007-2009 via a battery of 4 neuropsychologic tests that included phonemic and semantic fluency, the RI-48 (rappel indicé-48 item) cued-recall test, the trail-making test, and forward and backward digit spans. A principal components analysis was performed to account for correlations in test scores. Multivariate linear regression models or analyses of covariance were also performed. RESULTS In a multivariate model, we observed a positive association between the PNNS-GS and the cued-recall test and semantic and phonemic fluency tasks, whereas no association was observed with digit spans. The principal components analysis revealed 2 factors interpreted as reflecting verbal memory and executive functioning. Better adherence to nutritional recommendations was significantly associated with the verbal memory factor (β = 0.41; 95% CI: 0.17, 0.64), whereas no association was shown with the executive functioning factor. Removing specific components from the PNNS-GS did not modify the findings. CONCLUSION This study suggests that strong compliance with nutritional recommendations in midlife is associated in elderly individuals with better verbal memory, which is a cognitive domain that is particularly vulnerable to pathologic aging and Alzheimer disease. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00272428.
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[The SU.VI.MAX study, a randomized, placebo-controlled trial on the effects of antioxidant vitamins and minerals on health].
Hercberg, S
Annales pharmaceutiques francaises. 2006;(6):397-401
Abstract
The SU.VI.MAX study is a double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial testing, for 7,5 years, the effect of a combination of antioxidant vitamins and minerals, at doses considered to be nutritional (120 mg vitamin C, 30 mg vitamin E, 6 mg beta-carotene, 100 microg selenium and 20 mg zinc) in reducing cancer and ischemic vascular disease incidence in a general population (12.741 middle-aged). After 7.5 years, low-dose antioxidant supplementation had no effect on vascular disease incidence. This dose lowered, however, total cancer incidence in men, but not in women. With regard to contradictory results of observational and interventional studies published for the last decades, we can consider that the effect of antioxidants on cancer may depend on the doses (nutritional versus pharmacological), baseline antioxidant status (different between gender and/or nutritional status) and health status of subjects (healthy versus cancer high-risk subjects). Antioxidant supplementation may have a beneficial effect on cancer incidence only in healthy subjects who are not exposed to cancer risk, and with a particularly low baseline status. Finally, antioxidants as well as free radicals appear to be ambiguous nutrients with a wide range of benefits and toxicity. High doses of antioxidant supplements may be deleterious in high-risk subjects without any clinical symptoms in whom the initial phase of cancer development has already started.