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Food

Is fish really brain food?

New studies seem to back up what Bubbeh always said. Ruth Joseph investigates

August 13, 2009 12:38
Fish

By

Ruth Joseph

2 min read

When I was a small child, I was always told by my grandmother to “Eat your fish — it gives brains”. My imagination would run riot as I visualised small pieces of fish somehow forcing themselves into my head. As I grew older, I still tried to heed her advice, but with an air of teenage scepticism. Now with grandchildren of my own and a nutrition qualification under my belt, I am able re-examine that old wives’ tale.

I knew that fish contained plenty of zinc which was needed for good brain health and yes, had assumed that this was the basis for the story. But now, in the August 2009 edition of the American Journal of Nutrition, investigators claim that the omega fish oils in fatty fish “can help to ward off dementia later in life”.

The vast study explored 14, 960 separate participants in seven countries: the Dominican Republic, Mexico, Peru, Venezuela, Cuba, China and India, and found after assessing their cognitive deterioration — a decrease in understanding — followed up by personal interviews, that apart from the Indian participants, fish consumption was associated with a lesser rate of dementia in lower- to middle-income countries. Many of the participants were older than 65.

However, simply eating oily fish will not offset our junk food-heavy and sedentary lives. A study also published by the American Journal of Nutrition emphasises a need for wholegrains, nuts, eggs, olives and their oil, plus green leafy vegetables — ie, foods that are rich in Vitamin E — to help lower the incidence of Alzheimer’s Disease.

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