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New Evidence That Diet
Plays Role in Parkinson's
NEW YORK (Reuters
Health) - Men--but not women--who eat
a lot of dairy products appear to have a slightly higher risk
of developing Parkinson's disease, but researchers cautioned that
more study is needed to confirm the finding.
Dr. Honglei Chen from Harvard School
of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts said that even if diet
played a role in the development of Parkinson's disease, it would
likely be only one of many factors. Consequently, cutting back
on dairy may not affect risk of Parkinson's disease in men, and
may increase their risk of other conditions linked to low calcium
and vitamin D.
"Like other chronic diseases, Parkinson's
disease is multi-factorial. Many hypotheses have been proposed
and nearly all of them need further evidence for their relevance
in human Parkinson's disease. Diet, if it plays a role in Parkinson's
disease, is going to be one of the factors that predispose a person
to Parkinson's disease," Chen said.
Parkinson's disease causes tremor,
muscle rigidity and movement problems. The underlying cause is
the slow loss of neurons that produce dopamine, a brain chemical
involved in movement. The exact cause of Parkinson's disease has
eluded the research community since the condition first appeared,
and many suspect a combination of environmental factors, genetics
and aging are at work.
Many previous studies have sought
to examine whether some aspect of diet brought on the condition,
most of which have produced murky and contradictory results.
In the newest venture into an understanding
of the role of food in Parkinson's, Chen and colleagues found
that men who ate the most dairy products had a higher chance of
developing Parkinson's than did men who ate the least dairy products.
The biggest dairy lovers ate at least 3 servings a day, while
the lowest consumers said they downed less than 1 serving per
day.
The authors report their findings
in the December issue of Annals of Neurology.
Although the association between
dairy products and the risk of Parkinson's disease appeared strong,
Chen told Reuters Health that researchers need to confirm this
finding in other studies, and understand more about how these
ingredients might raise risk before recommending that men scale
back on dairy.
"Until further evidence comes out,
I do not think there is need to cut dairy consumption as the incidence
is still low," Chen said.
"On the other hand, if our finding
is confirmed, we should reconsider it because dairy consumption
is high in Western countries," the researcher added.
Chen and colleagues base the findings
on a follow-up of 47,331 adult men and 88,563 adult women from
the 1980s to 1998, tracking what they ate and noting if any developed
Parkinson's disease. During the study period, 210 men and 184
women developed Parkinson's disease.
SOURCE: Annals of Neurology 2002;52:793-801.
Reference
Source 89
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