Mushroom intake and risk of incident disabling dementia: the Circulatory Risk in Communities Study (CIRCS)

Author:

Aoki Shoko,Yamagishi KazumasaORCID,Maruyama Kotatsu,Ikeda Ai,Nagao Masanori,Noda Hiroyuki,Umesawa Mitsumasa,Hayama-Terada Mina,Muraki IsaoORCID,Okada Chika,Tanaka Mari,Kishida Rie,Kihara Tomomi,Takada Midori,Shimizu Yuji,Ohira Tetsuya,Imano Hironori,Sankai Tomoko,Okada Takeo,Tanigawa Takeshi,Kitamura Akihiko,Kiyama Masahiko,Iso Hiroyasu

Abstract

AbstractIt is uncertain whether dietary intake of mushrooms rich in dietary fibre and several antioxidants is associated with a lower risk of dementia. We sought to examine prospectively the association between mushroom intake and the risk of disabling dementia. We performed a prospective study involving 3750 people aged 40 to 64 years residing in three communities who participated in an annual cardiovascular risk survey from 1985 to 1999. Cases of incident disabling dementia were surveyed from 1999 to 2020. We calculated the hazard ratios (HR) and 95 % CI for incident total dementia according to mushroom intake among participants with or without a history of stroke. During a mean 16·0 years’ follow-up in 3739 eligible participants, 670 people developed disabling dementia. For women, mushroom intake was inversely associated with the risk of total dementia and the association was confined to dementia without a history of stroke. The multivariable HR (95 % CI) for total dementia in women were 0·81 (0·62, 1·06) for mushroom intake of 0·1–14·9 g/d and 0·56 (0·42, 0·75) for mushroom intake above 15·0 g/d (Pfor trend = 0·003) compared with no intake. The corresponding HR (95 % CI) for dementia without a history of stroke were 0·66 (0·47, 0·93) and 0·55 (0·38, 0·79) (Pfor trend = 0·01). In men, no associations were observed between mushroom intake and the risk of disabling dementia. Among Japanese women, dietary mushroom intake was associated with a lower risk of disabling dementia.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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