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For a Younger Brain, Eat Fish--Any Kind

By:   Jean Carper

People commonly experience "cognitive decline" as they age, says epidemiologist Martha Clare Morris at Chicago’s Rush University Medical Center. The good news: You can dramatically slow memory lapses and intellectual slide by eating fish.

In a new look at six years of data on 3,718 people ages 65 and older, Morris found that those who ate fish at least once a week had a 10% to 13% slower rate of cognitive decline over the course of the study. "That's like being three to four years younger," she says.

Surprisingly, omega-3 fat--abundant in salmon and sardines and shown in other research to cut Alzheimer's risk--did not account for these benefits. In this study, all kinds of seafood, including freshwater fish and shellfish, slowed cognitive decline.

A possibility: Something in seafood besides omega-3 protects the brain against milder age-related decline.

Copyright 2004 Jean Carper. Printed first in USA Weekend. All rights reserved.

For more information from Jean Carper, go to www.jeancarper.com

 
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