4.4 Article

Dietary fiber intake and risk of incident disabling dementia: the Circulatory Risk in Communities Study

Journal

NUTRITIONAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 148-155

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1028415X.2022.2027592

Keywords

Dietary fiber; diet; nutrition; cognitive dysfunction; disabling dementia; epidemiology; follow-up study; cohort study

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The study aimed to investigate the association between dietary fiber intake and the risk of disabling dementia. The results showed that higher dietary fiber intake, especially soluble fiber, was associated with a lower risk of disabling dementia requiring care.
Objectives It has been hypothesized that dietary fiber intake has a beneficial impact on prevention of dementia, but the epidemiological evidence is scant. We sought to examine whether dietary fiber intake is inversely associated with risk of dementia requiring care under the national insurance (disabling dementia). Methods The study setting was the Circulatory Risk in Communities Study, involving 3739 Japanese individuals aged 40-64 years at the dietary surveys (1985-99). Dietary fiber intake was estimated using the 24-hour dietary recall method. Incident disabling dementia was followed up from 1999 through 2020. Disabling dementia was further classified into that with or without a history of stroke. Hazard ratios of disabling dementia according to quartiles of total, soluble, and insoluble fiber intake were calculated using the Cox proportional hazards model. Results During a median 19.7-year follow-up, a total of 670 cases of disabling dementia developed. Dietary fiber intake was inversely associated with risk of dementia: the multivariate hazards ratios (95% confidence intervals) were 0.83 (0.67-1.04), 0.81 (0.65-1.02), and 0.74 (0.57-0.96) for individuals with the second, third, and highest quartiles of dietary fiber intake, respectively, as compared with the lowest quartile (P for trend = 0.03). The inverse association was more evident for soluble fiber intake and was confined to dementia without a history of stroke. As for fiber-containing foods, potatoes, but not vegetables or fruits, showed a similar association. Conclusions Dietary fiber intake, especially soluble fiber, was inversely associated with risk of disabling dementia in a general Japanese population.

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