Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 193: MIND Pattern Nutritional Intervention Modulates Mediterranean Diet Adherence and Gut Microbiota in Alzheimer’s Disease: An Observational Case–Control Study

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 193: MIND Pattern Nutritional Intervention Modulates Mediterranean Diet Adherence and Gut Microbiota in Alzheimer’s Disease: An Observational Case–Control Study

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18020193

Authors:
Laura Di Renzo
Glauco Raffaelli
Barbara Pala
Rossella Cianci
Daniele Peluso
Giovanni Gambassi
Vincenzo Giambra
Antonio Greco
David Della Morte Canosci
Antonino De Lorenzo
Paola Gualtieri

Background: Evidence on non-restrictive MIND pattern interventions in Alzheimer’s (ALZ) disease remains limited. Methods: In an observational case–control study, 60 participants (ALZ, n = 30; cognitively healthy controls, n = 30) completed baseline (T0) and follow-up (T1) after structured MIND counseling. Adherence was assessed via the MEDAS questionnaire. Stool samples (16S rRNA profiling) were taken and anthropometry and cognitive/functional measures were recorded at T0/T1. Results: In the ALZ group, MEDAS improved as adherence to the Mediterranean diet increased (increasing the use of vegetables ≥ 2/day, p < 0.01; and lowering butter adoption ≤ 1/day, p = 0.02), with a shift from low to moderate/high adherence; in controls, baseline Mediterranean diet adherence was already high, and changes in MEDAS categories were modest (low adherence from 13.8% to 3.6%, high adherence from 37.9% to 50.0%), with no statistically significant overall change (p = 0.39). Regarding gut microbiota (GM), in the ALZ group, alpha diversity increased significantly and Bray–Curtis PCoA separated T0 from T1. Species-level analysis showed increases in SCFA-linked taxa (e.g., Anaerobutyricum hallii, Blautia luti, Eubacterium coprostanoligenes) and reductions in dysbiosis/mucin-degrading taxa (e.g., Mediterraneibacter torques, M. gnavus, Agathobacter rectalis). Between-group Δ(T1 − T0) comparisons at the genus level indicated larger positive shifts in ALZ for Anaerobutyricum, Oscillibacter, Faecalicatena, Romboutsia, Mediterraneibacter, and Blautia, and more negative Δ for Gemmiger, Subdoligranulum, Bifidobacterium, Clostridium, and Collinsella. sPLS-DA showed partial separation (first two components ≈ 9% variance). Conclusions: A structured, non-restrictive MIND intervention was feasible, improved dietary adherence, and accompanied higher diversity and compositional remodeling of the GM in ALZ’s disease. Larger randomized mechanistic studies are warranted.

​Background: Evidence on non-restrictive MIND pattern interventions in Alzheimer’s (ALZ) disease remains limited. Methods: In an observational case–control study, 60 participants (ALZ, n = 30; cognitively healthy controls, n = 30) completed baseline (T0) and follow-up (T1) after structured MIND counseling. Adherence was assessed via the MEDAS questionnaire. Stool samples (16S rRNA profiling) were taken and anthropometry and cognitive/functional measures were recorded at T0/T1. Results: In the ALZ group, MEDAS improved as adherence to the Mediterranean diet increased (increasing the use of vegetables ≥ 2/day, p < 0.01; and lowering butter adoption ≤ 1/day, p = 0.02), with a shift from low to moderate/high adherence; in controls, baseline Mediterranean diet adherence was already high, and changes in MEDAS categories were modest (low adherence from 13.8% to 3.6%, high adherence from 37.9% to 50.0%), with no statistically significant overall change (p = 0.39). Regarding gut microbiota (GM), in the ALZ group, alpha diversity increased significantly and Bray–Curtis PCoA separated T0 from T1. Species-level analysis showed increases in SCFA-linked taxa (e.g., Anaerobutyricum hallii, Blautia luti, Eubacterium coprostanoligenes) and reductions in dysbiosis/mucin-degrading taxa (e.g., Mediterraneibacter torques, M. gnavus, Agathobacter rectalis). Between-group Δ(T1 − T0) comparisons at the genus level indicated larger positive shifts in ALZ for Anaerobutyricum, Oscillibacter, Faecalicatena, Romboutsia, Mediterraneibacter, and Blautia, and more negative Δ for Gemmiger, Subdoligranulum, Bifidobacterium, Clostridium, and Collinsella. sPLS-DA showed partial separation (first two components ≈ 9% variance). Conclusions: A structured, non-restrictive MIND intervention was feasible, improved dietary adherence, and accompanied higher diversity and compositional remodeling of the GM in ALZ’s disease. Larger randomized mechanistic studies are warranted. Read More

Full text for top nursing and allied health literature.

X