Caffeine and a healthy diet may boost memory, thinking skills; alcohol’s effect uncertain
Stephanie Watson, Executive Editor, Harvard Women's Health Watch
I’m not much use behind the keyboard
until I’ve had my morning cup of coffee. And I’m far from the only
American who needs a little java jolt to get their day going.
If a study published in this month’s Journal of Nutrition
is any indication, the caffeine in coffee might offer not just a
momentary mental boost but also longer-term effects on thinking skills.
Having an alcoholic drink a day might also benefit our mental
performance, but the line between just right and too much is uncertain.
An even better strategy for maintaining memory and thinking skills with
age may be to eat a healthy diet.
In the study, researchers from the National Institute on Aging
compared scores on various tests of thinking skills and memory with
caffeine, alcohol, and nutrient intake in 727 men and women taking part
in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging.
Over all, participants who ranked high on the healthy diet scale did
better on 10 tests of memory than those with lower diet scores. The same
held true for those who took in more caffeine. The effects for moderate
alcohol drinking were mixed.
The caffeine-brain connection
The reason you get a quick wakeup call after
chugging a mug of coffee has to do with the way caffeine tricks your
brain. Not only is caffeine a brain stimulant, but it also blocks
receptors for a chemical called adenosine, which normally prevents the
release of excitatory brain chemicals. With adenosine out of the way,
these brain-sparking chemicals can flow more freely—giving you a surge
of energy and potentially improving mental performance and slowing
age-related mental decline.
The Journal of Nutrition study isn’t
the last word on the subject of caffeine and memory. It showed that
people—particularly those who were ages 70 and over—who took in more
caffeine scored better on tests of mental function, but not on memory
tests or other measures of mental ability.
Some previous studies have shown improved
long-term memory performance and thinking ability in regular caffeine
consumers; others haven’t shown any connection.
Drink to your cognitive health?
When it comes to alcohol, its effects on
memory and thinking skills may depend on how they are measured and how
much you’re drinking. In this study, moderate alcohol use appeared to
improve working memory and attention—especially in women and in those
ages 70 and over. But those benefits could come at the expense of
declines in skills like executive function and global thinking.
Excessive drinking, defined as more than
two drinks a day for men or more than one a day for women, is known to
harm the brain. Over time, excessive drinking can cause everything from
short-term memory lapses to more permanent problems. Any benefits from
alcohol seen in the Journal of Nutrition study came from moderate drinking.
Better memory through diet
The study also looked at the connection
between diet and mental performance. People who ate foods with plenty of
healthful nutrients had better attention and memory than participant
with poorer diets. A healthy diet was also linked to good thinking
skills in women and participants under age 70. In particular, foods that
are part of the Mediterranean diet—fruits, vegetables, nuts, fish,
olive oil, and whole grains—show promise for preserving memory and
preventing Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia.
A recipe for maintaining memory
This study is just one of many linking healthy
eating habits with maintaining memory and thinking skills into old age.
Continuing a healthy diet, or switching to one, makes sense on many
levels. It probably is good for your brain, and it’s definitely good for
your heart, bones, muscles, and overall health.
As for caffeine? There’s no evidence yet
that you need to start drinking coffee or tea to protect your brain. If
you like drinking caffeinated beverages, enjoy them. But keep in mind
that adding lots of sugar or cream, or getting caffeine via
sugar-sweetened soda, may counter any benefits.
What about alcohol? If you enjoy drinking
alcohol, keep it moderate—or less. As the researchers write, “alcohol
has potentially deleterious effects over time with lower intake being a
better choice than moderate intake.”
(Courtesy: Harvard Health Publications)
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