Health
Red wine, peanuts can help prevent memory loss
Washington, Feb 5
A compound found in red
grapes, red wine, peanuts and some berries may help prevent age-related
decline in memory, says a study led by an Indian-origin scientist.
Resveratrol
is an antioxidant that may have positive effects on the hippocampus, an
area of the brain that is critical to functions such as memory,
learning and mood, the researchers said.
"The results of the
study were striking," said Ashok Shetty, professor at Texas A&M
Health Science Center College of Medicine.
Because both humans
and animals show a decline in cognitive capacity after middle age, the
findings may have implications for treating memory loss in the elderly.
Resveratrol
may even be able to help people afflicted with severe neurodegenerative
conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, the study suggested.
"The
study provides novel evidence that resveratrol treatment in late middle
age can help improve memory and mood function in old age," said Shetty
who obtained his Ph D degree in neuroscience from the All India
Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi in 1990.
Treatment with resveratrol had apparent benefits in terms of learning, memory and mood function in aged rats.
The
growth and development of neurons approximately doubled in the rats
given resveratrol compared to the control rats, Shetty said.
"Both spatial learning and memory improved in the resveratrol-treated rats," he noted.
The study appeared in the journal Scientific Reports.