Contributors from the Jockey Club Centre for Positive Ageing outline dietary strategies that can help preserve cognitive ...
This powerhouse vegetable is packed with compounds that help protect brain cells from inflammation and oxidative stress.
The study was led by Puja Agarwal and her team, who believe that changing your diet might be one of the easiest ways to take care of your brain. They suggest that people try to eat more spinach, kale, ...
People who follow a MIND diet, even if started later in life, were significantly less likely to develop Alzheimer's disease or related forms of dementia, according to new research. The MIND diet ...
It's true that many of the illnesses related to aging have components over which we have no control. But doctors and researchers are increasingly realizing that we may have more power than we thought ...
Research developments in Alzheimer’s disease, including newly approved blood tests for early detection, have helped patients get diagnosed sooner. With dementia on the rise among younger individuals, ...
A new study confirms that following the MIND diet can reduce Alzheimer’s disease risk in older US adults, with researchers concluding that it’s never too late to start eating better for brain health.
June is Alzheimer’s Awareness Month. Every 65 seconds, someone is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Right now, nearly 7 million Americans are living with the disease. That number is expected to ...
Stacey Leasca is an award-winning journalist with nearly two decades of newsroom experience. She is also the co-founder of Be a Travel Writer, an online course for the next generation of travel ...
This is according to Richard Oakley, associate director of research and innovation at leading UK charity Alzheimer's Society, who shared everything that has been linked to preventing the disease—from ...
Vegetables like broccoli can play an important role in helping reduce your risk of Alzheimer’s. Broccoli’s combo of antioxidants, sulforaphane and folate helps protect the brain from cognitive decline ...