IRON
It's the
fuel that allows red blood cells to transport oxygen throughout the body. But
when it comes to brain health, a 2011 study in the journal Neurology showed
that people with high hemoglobin (an indicator of iron levels) were more than
three times as likely to develop Alzheimer's as those with levels in a healthy
range.
GET SMART:
Go easy on meat-it's loaded with easily absorbable heme iron, which your body
can't regulate well. Dark leafy greens can help you meet the recommended daily
allowance (RDA) for iron (18 mg for women ages 19 to 50; 8 mg for women 50+).
They're also rich in antioxidants that "bind to iron so it can't cause as
much damage," says UCLA psychiatry professor George Bartzokis, MD.
QUICK FIX:
Swap out your cast-iron pans for stainless steel. One study found that the iron
content of spaghetti sauce increased more than nine times after being cooked in
a cast-iron skillet.
ALUMINUM
The
aluminum-Alzheimer's link remains hotly contested, but most experts agree that
the metal can be a neurotoxin. Although our bodies don't need aluminum to
function, it seeps in through antacids ("they can deliver a hundred times
more aluminum than you'd get from a day's worth of food," Barnard says);
soda cans, which can leach aluminum; and tap water (aluminum can be introduced
during purification). In one British study, people with high levels of aluminum
in their tap water had a 50 percent increased risk for Alzheimer's compared to
those with the least exposure.
GET SMART:
Call your local water supplier and ask for the aluminum level. "If your
city's range is anything higher than undetectable, install an under-sink
filter;' Barnard says.
QUICK FIX:
Store your leftovers in glass; acidic foods like pizza or pasta sauce can
absorb aluminum from foil.
COPPER
Dietary
copper (in foods like shellfish, nuts, and beans) is generally safe. But
inorganic copper-the type in multivitamins and tap water-largely bypasses the
liver's filtration system and heads directly to the blood
and brain. It's especially dangerous when combined with saturated and trans
fats: Research has found that individuals whose high-fat diets included 1.6 or
more mg of copper a day experienced a loss of mental function equivalent to an
extra 19 years of aging, compared with those who took in an average of 0.9mg a
day.
GET SMART:
Check your pipes. If you have copper plumbing, let the water run for a minute
in the morning before drinking from the tap, to flush out any copper that may
have built up overnight.
QUICK FIX:
Choose a supplement with no more than 0.9 mg of copper - the average women's
multivitamin contains more than double that.
by Lesile
Goldman
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