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Press Release

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 PM ET, February 20, 2013

Antioxidants in Your Diet May Not Reduce Risk of Stroke or Dementia

MINNEAPOLIS -

Contrary to other research, a new study found that the total level of antioxidants in people鈥檚 diets is not related to their risk of developing stroke or dementia. The study is published in the February 20, 2013, online issue of the medical journal of the . Antioxidants such as lycopene, beta-carotene and vitamins C and E are found in many foods. 鈥淭hese results are interesting because other studies have suggested that antioxidants may help protect against stroke and dementia,鈥 said study author Elizabeth E. Devore, ScD, of Harvard Medical School in Boston and Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam, Netherlands. 鈥淚t鈥檚 possible that individual antioxidants, or the main foods that contribute those antioxidants鈥攔ather than the total antioxidant level in the diet鈥攃ontribute to the lower risk of dementia and stroke found in earlier studies.鈥 The study involved 5,395 people age 55 and older who had no signs of dementia at the start of the study. Participants completed questionnaires about how often they ate 170 foods over the past year at the start of the study. Then the participants were followed for an average of nearly 14 years. Participants were divided into three groups: low, moderate and high levels of antioxidants in the diet. About 600 people developed dementia during the study and about 600 people had a stroke. But researchers found that people with high levels of antioxidants were no more or less likely to develop brain disease than people with low levels of antioxidants. Devore noted that about 90 percent of the difference in antioxidant levels in the study was due to the amount of coffee and tea people drank. Coffee and tea contain high levels of nontraditional antioxidants such as flavonoids. 鈥淭his differed from an Italian study that found the higher total antioxidant levels were associated with a lower risk of stroke, where the variation from coffee and tea was lower, and the contribution from alcoholic beverages, fruits and vegetables was higher,鈥 Devore said. The study was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research and the U.S. National Institutes of Health. To learn more about brain health, visit .

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