PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Dietary trans fat linked to worse memory

2015-06-17
(Press-News.org) Higher consumption of dietary trans fatty acids (dTFA), commonly used in processed foods to improve taste, texture and durability, has been linked to worsened memory function in men 45 years old and younger, according to a University of California, San Diego School of Medicine study published online on June 17 in PLOS ONE.

Researchers evaluated data from 1,018 men and women who were asked to complete a dietary survey and memory test involving word recall. On average, men aged 45 and younger recalled 86 words; however, for each additional gram of trans fats consumed daily, performance dropped by 0.76 words. This translates to an expected 12 fewer words recalled by young men with dTFA intake levels matching the highest observed in the study, compared to otherwise similar men consuming no trans fats.

"Trans fats were most strongly linked to worse memory in men during their high productivity years," said Beatrice A. Golomb, MD, PhD, lead author and professor of medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine. "Trans fat consumption has previously shown adverse associations to behavior and mood--other pillars of brain function. However, to our knowledge a relation to memory or cognition had not been shown."

After adjusting for age, exercise, education, ethnicity and mood, the link between higher dTFA and poorer memory was maintained in men 45 and younger.

The study focused predominantly on men because of a small number of women in this age group. However, including women in the analysis did not change the finding, said Golomb. An association of dTFA to word memory was not observed in older populations. Golomb said this is likely due to dietary effects showing more clearly in younger adults. Insults and injuries to the brain accrue with age and add variability to memory scores that can swamp ability to detect diet effects.

Trans fatty acids have been linked to negative effects on lipid profiles, metabolic function, insulin resistance, inflammation and cardiac and general health. In 2013, the United States Food and Drug Administration issued a preliminary determination that trans fats were no longer generally recognized as safe. According to the Centers for Disease Control, reducing dTFA consumption could prevent 10,000 to 20,000 heart attacks and 3,000 to 7,000 coronary heart disease deaths per year in the U.S.

"As I tell patients, while trans fats increase the shelf life of foods, they reduce the shelf life of people," said Golomb.

INFORMATION:

Co-authors include Alexis K. Bui of UC San Diego.

Funding for this research came, in part, from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute at the National Institutes of Health (RO1 HL63055-05) and the UC San Diego General Clinical Research Center (NIH MO1 RR00827).



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Climate change may impact future tourism at some US national parks

2015-06-17
Visitation at U.S. National Parks may potentially increase with increasing temperature in temperate areas, but may decrease with temperatures rising over 80 degrees Fahrenheit, according to a study using future climate and visitation modeling scenarios published June 17 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Nicholas Fisichelli and colleagues from U.S. National Park Service. Climate change may affect not only natural and cultural resources within protected areas, but also park tourism. To assess the relationship between climate and park visitation, the authors of this ...

Barnacles go with the flow to find a home on dolphin fins

Barnacles go with the flow to find a home on dolphin fins
2015-06-17
Highly specialized coronulid barnacles may be able to identify and attach to the fins of quick-swimming dolphins, locating areas suited for finding food and developing larvae, according to a study carried out as a collaboration between the University of Valencia, Spain, and the University of Southern Mississippi, and published June 17, 2015 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Juan Carrillo and colleagues. Scientists have reported several types of symbiotic barnacles that settle on living host organisms. The highly specialized coronulid barnacle, Xenobalanus globicipitis, ...

Vinculin protein boosts function in the aging heart

2015-06-17
San Diego, June 17 -- A team of researchers led by bioengineers at the University of California, San Diego provide new insights on how hearts 'stay young' and keep functioning over a lifetime despite the fact that most organisms generate few new heart cells. Identifying key gene expression changes that promote heart function as organisms age could lead to new therapy targets that address age-related heart failure. The researchers found that the contractile function of the hearts of fruit flies is greatly improved in flies that overexpress the protein vinculin, which also ...

Fossil of large 'walking' bat discovered in New Zealand reveals ancient lineage

Fossil of large walking bat discovered in New Zealand reveals ancient lineage
2015-06-17
Sydney, Australia - Fossilised remains of a new bat species, which lived 16 million years ago, walked on four limbs and was three times larger than today's average bat, have been discovered in New Zealand. The fossils were found near Central Otago on South Island, in sediment left over from a vast prehistoric body of water known as Lake Manuherikia, which was part of warmer subtropical rainforest during the early Miocene era, between 16 and 19-million-years-ago. The new species, Mystacina miocenalis, was described today in the journal PLOS ONE, and is related to another ...

Changes in HIV genetic code determine severity of disease

2015-06-17
In a finding that furthers the understanding of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), researchers from Children's Hospital Los Angeles discovered two locations where a single difference in HIV's genetic code altered the way the virus infected the cell, thereby influencing the progression of the disease. The results of this study will be published in PLOS ONE on June 17. HIV targets specific white blood cells, called CD4+ T-cells, which play an important role in organizing the immune response to bacteria and viruses. By using two different receptors, CCR5 (R5) or CXCR4 ...

New mechanism for male infertility discovered

2015-06-17
A new study led from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden links male infertility to autoimmune prostatic inflammation. The findings are published in the journal Science Translational Medicine. Involuntary childlessness is common, and in half of all cases attributable to infertility in the man. Although male infertility has many possible causes, it often remains unexplained. In the present study, the researchers have discovered a reason for reduced fertility in people with autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS1), which increases the risk of developing autoimmune ...

New tool identifies novel compound targeting causes of type 2 diabetes

2015-06-17
BOSTON -- A new drug screening technology developed at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health has identified a new potential anti-diabetes compound--and a powerful way to quickly test whether other molecules can have a positive effect on a critical molecular pathway believed to be central to diseases ranging from diabetes to retinitis pigmentosa, cystic fibrosis, Huntington's disease, and Alzheimer's. The study appears in the June 17, 2015 issue of Science Translational Medicine. The compound, which the authors have called azoramide*, works by focusing on an ...

Isolation and characterization of human hepatocytes and non-parenchymal liver cells

2015-06-17
Scientists at the Charité - University Medicine Berlin, Department for General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery, led by Dr. Georg Damm (and Prof. Dr. Daniel Seehofer) have established a protocol for an uncomplicated isolation of primary human hepatocytes (PHH), Kupffer cells (KC), liver endothelial cells (LEC), and human Stellate cells (HSC) from human donor tissue. Liver cells were isolated from the tissue using a two-step EDTA/collagenase perfusion technique, followed by a separation of PHH and different non-parenchymal cell (NPC) fractions through Percoll density ...

This week from AGU: Gender parity in the geosciences, Tibetan Plateau formation

2015-06-17
This Week From AGU: Gender parity in the geosciences, Tibetan Plateau formation From eos.org: Working Toward Gender Parity in the Geosciences How are women represented in the geosciences? The author of a new AGU book, Women in the Geosciences: Practical, Positive Practices Toward Parity, answers some questions. From AGU's journals: Dynamics of the Earth's Surface in the Eastern Tibetan Plateau The evolution of mountains is written in the histories of the rocks that make up their ranges. Scientists have long used areas where rivers cut deep incisions in rock ...

Mold unlocks new route to biofuels

Mold unlocks new route to biofuels
2015-06-17
Scientists at The University of Manchester have made an important discovery that forms the basis for the development of new applications in biofuels and the sustainable manufacturing of chemicals. Based at the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology (MIB), researchers have identified the exact mechanism and structure of two key enzymes isolated from yeast moulds that together provide a new, cleaner route to the production of hydrocarbons. Published in Nature, the research offers the possibility of replacing the need for oil in current industrial processes with a greener ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Inactive components in agricultural runoff may be hidden contributors to drinking water hazards

Colombia’s peatlands could be a crucial tool to fight climate change. But first we have to find them

Researchers refine a hybrid music therapy intervention for patients with cardiac and pulmonary conditions

Research Spotlight: Combining dexmedetomidine with spinal anesthesia prolongs pain relief and decreases shivering during surgery

Pennington Biomedical’s 2025 Bray Obesity Symposium to offer on-demand continuing education for physicians

Unlocking faster orthodontic treatments: the role of atf6 in bone remodeling

SwRI-led Lucy mission survey of main belt asteroid Donaldjohanson imminent

New bat cell lines and reagents help to study bat antiviral immune responses against hantaviruses and coronaviruses

Preterm birth might be predicted with high accuracy with new cheap, non-invasive test, based on cell-free DNA collected in standard early pregnancy testing

CVD researcher/clinician named editor-in-chief of Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine.

Holy shift: More Americans finding faith outside church

New analysis underscores health risks of e-cigarettes

USTC develops high-performance biomimetic proton gating system

Uncovering the molecular drivers of liver cancer

A bowling revolution: Modeling the perfect conditions for a strike

Simulate sound in 3D at a finer scale than humans can perceive

Screening history, stage at diagnosis, and mortality in screen-detected breast cancer

Pitt researchers release Phage images with unprecedented detail

Sound wave research for breast cancer receives $5.5 million

Gene variant linked to benign prostate hyperplasia risk in Lebanese men

Teoxane announces new study reinforcing the biocompatibility, safety and efficacy of RHA®4 in dynamic facial support

Study identifies U.S. hotspots for drinking water quality violations and lack of access to safe, clean water

Busted! Researchers revolutionize fraud detection with machine learning

Earthworm-inspired multimodal pneumatic continuous soft robot enhanced by winding transmission

Coastal heritage threatened by climate change

A tale of two hummingbird bills


Corn leads to improved performance in lithium-sulfur batteries

SynGAP Research Fund (SRF), dba Cure SYNGAP1, announces Board of Trustees Update 2025

Machine learning unlocks superior performance in light-driven organic crystals

Exploring the mutational landscape of colorectal cancer

[Press-News.org] Dietary trans fat linked to worse memory