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Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ON June 05, 2012

Food for Thought? Study Says Soy May Not Help Preserve Thinking Skills in Women

MINNEAPOLIS -

Contrary to earlier reports, a new study suggests that soy protein may not preserve overall thinking abilities in women over the age of 45, but may improve memory related to facial recognition. The study is published in the June 5, 2012, print issue of the medical journal of the . 鈥淪oy is a staple of many traditional Asian diets and has been thought possibly to improve cognition in postmenopausal women,鈥 said study author Victor W. Henderson, MD, MS, with Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., and a Fellow with the 好色先生. 鈥淥ur study found long-term use of soy protein neither improved nor impaired overall cognition.鈥 For the study, 313 healthy postmenopausal women between the ages of 45 and 92 were given 25 grams of soy protein daily, a dose comparable to that of traditional Asian diets, or a milk protein-matched placebo. Participants were also given tests that measured memory and other thinking abilities at the start of the study and 2.5 years later. The study found that there was no significant change in test scores between the women who took the soy supplements and those who took the milk protein supplements. There was, however, a small improvement in visual memory, or facial recognition, in the soy protein group compared to the milk protein group by about 13 percent. 鈥淥ur study provides strong evidence that soy supplements should not be used by postmenopausal women with the main goal of enhancing overall cognitive ability,鈥 said Henderson. 鈥淥n the other hand, a diet high in soy protein does not appear to have any harmful effect on thinking skills, either.鈥 The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the National Center of Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the Office of Dietary Supplements and the Office of Research on Women鈥檚 Health. To learn more about cognition, visit http://www.aan.com/patients.

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