Ultra-Processed Foods May Shorten Attention Span and Raise Dementia Risk

Staff
By Staff
9 Min Read

Ultra-processed foods have already been tied to a long list of health concerns, from heart disease to type 2 diabetes. Now new research suggests that these so-called convenience foods could contribute to changes that negatively affect brain health.

Australian researchers found that people who ate more ultra-processed foods tended to perform worse on tests of attention and had higher scores on a measure of modifiable dementia risk factors, compared with people who consumed fewer of those types of foods.

Even small differences mattered, they discovered: For every 10 percent increase in ultra-processed foods eaten, participants had a small but measurable drop in attention scores.

“To put our findings in perspective, a 10 percent increase in ultra-processed foods is roughly equivalent to adding a standard packet of chips to your daily diet,” says lead author Barbara Cardoso, PhD, a researcher in the department of nutrition, dietetics, and food at Monash University’s Victorian Heart Institute in Australia.

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