Saturday, December 23, 2017

One Serving Of These Slows Brain Aging By 11 Years - Leafy green vegetables

You already lost 5 years because of your stroke. Ask your doctor how you are going to make up those lost years. This is still useless because it doesn't tell us what a serving is.  Be careful if you are on warfarin, don't do this on your own.  DEMAND your doctor get you a diet protocol because you can't do this dangerous food on your own.

Would you rather try young blood?

OR;

  Cannabis Reverses Aging Processes in the Brain

One Serving Of These Slows Brain Aging By 11 Years - Leafy green vegetables

Eat up! They are good for your brain…
One daily serving of leafy green vegetables could preserve memory and thinking skills, new research shows.
Older adults who ate at least one serving of these veggies were the equivalent of 11 years younger cognitively.
This was compared to those that ate few leafy green vegetables.
Dr Martha Clare Morris, the nutritional epidemiologist who led the study, said:
“Adding a daily serving of green leafy vegetables to your diet may be a simple way to help promote brain health.
There continues to be sharp increases in the percentage of people with dementia as the oldest age groups continue to grow in number.
Effective strategies to prevent dementia are critically needed.”
The study followed 960 people with an average age of 81, none of whom had dementia.
Their memory and thinking skills were tested once a year for around 5 years.
Each person reported how often they ate greens, including salad and lettuce.
When they were followed up, the results showed that the more leafy greens they ate, the better their cognitive health.
Dr Morris said:
“The study results do not prove that eating green, leafy vegetables slows brain aging, but it does show an association
The study cannot rule out other possible reasons for the link.
[…]
Because the study focused on older adults with the majority of participants being white, the results may not apply to younger adults and to people of color.
The results need to be confirmed by other investigators in different populations and through randomized trials to establish a cause-and-effect relationship between the eating leafy greens and reductions in the incidence of cognitive decline.”

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