Tuesday, June 21, 2005

Folic Acid May Help Memory and Alzheimer's Disease

In a recent Dutch study Folic Acid was studied with relation to memory skills in "older" people. The study concluded that high doses of Folic Acid, a supplement that has already been proven safe in adults, may help to retain or improve memory skills and slow the cognitive decline of aging. Here is a quote from the Yahoo! News article:
The new study doesn't show folic acid could prevent Alzheimer's — the people who tested the vitamin didn't have symptoms of that disease.

But as people age, some decline in memory and other brain functions is inevitable. Taking 800 micrograms of folic acid a day slowed that brain drain, reported lead researcher Jane Durga of Wageningen University in the Netherlands.

In the study, 818 cognitively healthy people ages 50 to 75 swallowed either folic acid or a dummy pill for three years.

On memory tests, the supplement users had scores comparable to people 5.5 years younger, Durga said. On tests of cognitive speed, the folic acid helped users perform as well as people 1.9 years younger.


Definitely a promising study and one that warrants some serious follow up.