GoodHealthMD.com
Folic Acid to Boost Memory?
Is it true that folic acid can prevent Alzheimers disease? I heard that it
improves memory.
New findings do suggest that folic acid may slow the declines in memory that
can occur with age. Dutch researchers recently presented compelling evidence
from a three-year study that included 818 adults between the ages of 50 and
70, none of whom were having any memory problems. During the study, the
participants took either a placebo or 800 mg folic acid (twice the amount
recommended for women of childbearing age to protect against birth defects).
Results showed that those who took the folic acid had memory scores equal to
people five and a half years younger. The folic acid group in the study also
did better in information processing and muscle skills. The study was
conducted by researchers at Wageningen University in the Netherlands and
reported at the Alzheimers Association International Conference on Dementia
Prevention.
While interesting, these results fall far short of showing that taking folic
acid can prevent Alzheimer.s disease. Since none of the participants
suffered from Alzheimer.s, the study couldn.t assess whether or not folic
acid slowed progression of the disease. But results did indicate that the
supplement may offer some protection against normal age-related declines in
memory.
Earlier studies have suggested that vitamins C and E taken together might
slow the progress of Alzheimer.s. One, from Johns Hopkins University, found
that people over 65 least likely to advertisement
develop the disease were those who had been taking individual supplements of
vitamins C and E. The study included thousands of individuals aged 65 and
older in Cache County, Utah, who were followed from 1995 to 2000. More
research is needed to determine whether or not vitamins C and E really do
offer protection. The study was published in the January 2004 issue of the
Archives of Neurology.
Other research has shown that people with high blood levels of homocysteine
have twice the normal risk of Alzheimers. Homocysteine is a toxic amino
acid also linked to heart attacks and strokes; it is more likely to be high
if your diet is high in animal protein and low in fruits and leafy
vegetables (good sources of folic acid and other B vitamins). Interestingly
enough, the treatment for high levels of homocysteine in the blood is
supplemental B-vitamins including folic acid. Although we have no proof that
B vitamins and folic acid protect against Alzheimer's, I do recommend taking
a multivitamin that provides at least 400 micrograms of folic acid to help
protect against heart disease, strokes and, perhaps, Alzheimer's disease.
And I've started taking 800 micrograms a day myself.