- Brain-healthy eating slowed dementia and heart disease in older adults, study finds.
- The study highlights diets rich in vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes and unsaturated fats.
- Long-term eating patterns, not single meals, shape how the brain and body age over time.
Older adults who follow brain-healthy eating habits develop dementia more slowly, while those who eat more inflammatory foods see dementia and other chronic health conditions progress faster, according to a new study.
Research has long shown that diets rich in vegetables, whole grains, fish and healthy fats can support brain health and reduce the risk of dementia and other chronic illnesses, while diets high in processed meats, sugar and saturated fats have the opposite effect. Now, a new study published in Nature Aging tracked older adults to see how different eating habits influenced the pace at which these conditions developed.
How Was the Study Conducted?
Researchers followed more than 2,400 older adults in Sweden over 15 years, tracking both what they ate and how their health changed over time. Participants’ eating habits were scored using established patterns, including the MIND diet, Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) and Alternative Mediterranean Diet (AMED), as well as measures of more inflammatory food patterns.
The team also monitored the development of chronic conditions across different parts of the body, including dementia, heart problems, metabolic disorders and musculoskeletal issues.
What Did the Study Find?
The researchers found that older adults who followed brain- and heart-friendly eating habits developed dementia and cardiovascular problems more slowly. However, these healthy patterns didn’t seem to have a noticeable effect on musculoskeletal conditions.
By contrast, participants whose eating habits were higher in inflammatory foods experienced faster progression of dementia and cardiovascular disease as well as a higher overall risk of chronic illnesses.
The brain- and heart-healthy eating patterns assessed—the MIND diet, Mediterranean diet and more general healthy eating—all prioritize foundational elements of a balanced, healthy diet: vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes and unsaturated fats.
How Does This Apply to Real Life?
This study highlights how long-term eating habits can shape health decades down the line. It’s less about any single meal and more about the patterns that build over years. Choosing foods that support brain and heart health may slow the progression of dementia and other chronic conditions, while diets high in inflammatory foods can speed it up.
For older adults, this means that consistent, overall choices—like prioritizing vegetables, whole grains and fish over foods high in sugar, sodium and saturated fats—can help maintain health and independence over time. The impact isn’t instant, but it accumulates, shaping how the body and brain age.
The researchers also noted that healthier eating habits were less common among participants who were older, less active, smoked, lived alone, worked in manual jobs or had lower levels of education—factors the study identified as potential influences on the associations between eating patterns and health outcomes.
Our Expert Take
A new study suggests that diets like the Mediterranean and MIND diets—both rich in vegetables, fruit, whole grains, legumes and unsaturated fats—may delay the onset of dementia and heart disease. Everyday choices add up. Over the years, healthier eating patterns can make the difference between faster decline and a steadier path, supporting brain health, independence and quality of life.