ADVERTISEMENT
Healthy Recipes, Healthy Eating, Healthy Cooking - Eating Well
 SEARCH EATINGWELL.COM
 
  ADVANCED HEALTHY RECIPES SEARCH »
 MY EATINGWELL
LEARN MORE | LOGIN

NUTRITION NEWS

Free Eating Well Newsletters

and special offer emails.

EatingWell This Week
Healthy recipes of the season
EatingWell Diet
Healthy weight loss how-to, recipes
EatingWell for Health
Nutrition news, health how-to
HealthESavers Coupons
Valuable printable coupons
privacy policy

ADVERTISEMENT

NUTRITION NEWS


add email print

ADVERTISEMENT

Will These Foods Make You Smarter?

The trend to fortify foods with the omega-3 DHA.



One of the reasons nutrition experts recommend eating fish twice a week is that they are a good source of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), an omega-3 fat that has heart-healthy benefits. Now preliminary studies suggest that DHA may help boost brain power too. It makes sense: DHA comprises much of the cell membranes in our brains. And food producers are taking the concept and running with it—they’re adding DHA to foods like yogurt, soy milk and eggs, then marketing them with “smart” slogans. But do these products really maximize mental performance?

Supporting evidence: Some research links higher intakes of DHA with reduced risk of Alzheimer’s disease and the cognitive decline that precedes it. In a 2003 study in the Archives of Neurology, people aged 65-plus who ate at least one (DHA-rich) fish meal per week had a 60 percent reduced risk for Alzheimer’s. And growing evidence suggests DHA supplementation during pregnancy and early infancy may result in superior cognitive performance of the child. This past June, a randomized clinical trial in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition revealed that nine-month-old babies of mothers who’d eaten DHA-fortified cereal bars (about 200 mg of DHA daily) during the last trimester of their pregnancies demonstrated better problem-solving skills than those whose mothers consumed “placebo” cereal bars.

Cons: Currently, there is no research to show that eating DHA-rich foods improves mental function in healthy adults. “It remains to be seen whether initiating DHA later in life has an important effect on the brain,” says Joseph Quinn, M.D., associate professor of neurology at Oregon Health & Science University.

Our verdict: Eating inherently healthful foods like yogurt that have been fortified with DHA, along with foods like salmon and tuna, is a good way to increase intake of DHA, says Elizabeth Somer, R.D., author of Food & Mood (Henry Holt & Co.). And research does indicate that boosting DHA intake to about 200 mg per day—about three times what the average American gets now—may have some mental benefits. That said, don’t expect these fortified foods to help you land a spot on Jeopardy!

Related Articles
What are Food Sources of Omega-3s?
Egg Buyer's Guide

Stay current with the latest issue of EatingWell. Subscribe Risk-Free Now!

 
USER COMMENTS — Add Your Comment
I hope for those benefits to the brain, but will continue to take Omegas daily for helping to keep the blood pressure in check, too - it serves more than a single healthful purpose!

Victoria, Woodbridge, VA
I've been making smoothies containing DHA for my children to help with ADD for about two years now. It really does help them concentrate and stay on task longer. I also use the smoothies in making muffins so they can eat them during school. Does it make them smarter? I don't know, but it helps them with attention issues which in turn gives the opportunity to hear and retain more. I'm all for that - we'll take any other benefits that come along as well.

Faith, W. Chester, OH


Add Your Comment:
Name
City
State
Comments
(HTML is NOT allowed)


Introducing the EatingWell Menu Planner
EatingWell Heart Book

Healthy recipe RSS feeds from Eating Well
Healthy recipe videos from Eating Well
Healthy recipes for your mobile phone from Eating Well


Save Money with HealthESavers Coupons
 

The EatingWell Market


FEATURED SPONSORS:
Enter to Win
Columbria Crest Winery
Al Fresco All Natural
Save with HealthESavers Coupons

Home   |   Recipes   |   Health   |   Eat & Drink   |   Diet   |   News & Views   |   Community   |   About Us   |   Subscribe   |   Give a Gift   |   Shop   |   Customer Service   |   My EatingWell   |   Newsletters   |   EatingWell Market   |   Professionals   |   Advertising   |   Jobs

EatingWell, 823A Ferry Rd. PO Box 1010, Charlotte, VT 05445, USA     www.eatingwell.com     Tel. (802) 425-5700

World Wide Web Health Award Winner