Joe: My doctor told me to give up drinking,
smoking, and fatty foods.
Sam: What will you do?
Joe: I think I’ll give up my doctor.
I try not to get too excited about memory benefits of
supplements, because too often the claims are not substantiated by studies that
are well controlled and peer reviewed. I now think resveratrol may be one of
the few supplements that benefits brain function.
When I wrote my first blog on research on resveratrol
benefits for brain function and memory, there were over 2,000 scientific
papers.[1]
Don't worry; I am only going to tell you about a few studies.
Resveratrol is an active ingredient in red wine. This
compound has been credited for explaining why red-wine drinkers in France, who
drink more wine than most people, are healthier than would be predicted by
their lifestyle of little exercise and eating lots of cheese. The problem is
most studies suggest you would have to drink a 100 or more glasses of red wine
a day to get much resveratrol effect (and that effect would obviously be
negated by a toxic dose of alcohol). An obviously more healthful choice is the
highly concentrated pill forms of resveratrol that are now on the market.
Most of the protective biological actions associated with
resveratrol have been associated with its scavenger properties for free
radicals and the protective effects that it confers on the heart and diabetes.
One important study comes from a diabetes research group in
Brazil recently who reported a beneficial effect of resveratrol on diabetic
rats.[2]
Resveratrol (in a modest rat dose of 10 and 20 mg per kilogram per day for 30
days) prevented the impairment of memory induced by diabetes. Resveratrol may
be protecting neuron terminals that diabetes can damage. An earlier study by
another group showed resveratrol improved glucose metabolism and promoted
longevity in diabetic mice.
Another benefit of resveratrol is the anti-oxidant property.
The brain produces more free-radical damage than other organs, because it burns
so much oxygen. Compared with other organs, the brain has especially low levels
of antioxidant defense enzymes.
One recent study has revealed resveratrol had protective
effects against brain damage caused by a chemical that kills acetylcholine
neurons. Injection of this toxin into the brain of rats impaired their memory
performance in two kinds of maze tasks. The impairment was significantly
reduced by repeated injection of resveratrol (10 and 20 mg/kg) per day for 25
days, beginning four days before the toxin injection.[3]
Another recent study examined effects on working memory in
mice fed a resveratrol-supplemented diet for four weeks before being injected
with a cytokine to induce inflammation and accelerate aging. Resveratrol significantly
reduced memory impairment in the aged group, but not in the young adults[4].
The lack of benefit in young adults was a little misleading, in that there was
a "ceiling effect" in that the young adults were not impaired by the
cytokine injection.
The practical issue
for us is whether resveratrol will help cognitive function in humans,
especially healthy humans. It seems likely because other substances that have
strong anti-oxidant properties seem to improve memory capability. Because
animal studies have shown promise for resveratrol in preventing or treatment
several different conditions associated with aging, several human clinical
trials have been initiated.[5]
An impressive new
study of older humans, male and female, has just been reported.[6]
Twenty-three healthy, but overweight people completed 6 months of daily
resveratrol intake (200 mg ― the commercial brand I take has 300 mg/capsule). A
paired control group got placebo pills. A double-blind design assured that
neither the subjects nor the experimenters knew which individuals were in each
group during data processing. Memory tests of word recall revealed significant
improvement in the resveratrol group. Resveratrol also increased brain-scan
measures of functional connectivity, which identified linked neural activity
between the hippocampus and several areas of cerebral cortex.
Because others had shown that resveratrol increased insulin
sensitivity in humans, these authors examine several markers important to
diabetes. Resveratrol decreased the standing levels of sugar-bound hemoglobin,
a standard marker for glucose control.
What
foods besides red grapes have resveratrol? The most likely other sources you
would eat or drink are blueberries, cranberries, and peanuts. It is not likely
that you could drink or eat enough of such substances to get enough resveratrol
to do much good. Because of the scientifically documented benefits of
resveratrol, highly concentrated supplements are now on the market (I have been
taking it for a couple of years). I haven't given up my two glasses of red wine
each day, but I have started taking one of the supplements. I haven't seen any
reports that high doses of resveratrol are toxic.
[2] Schmatz R, et al. (2009). Resveratrol prevents memory
deficits and the increase in acetylcholinesterase activity in
streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Eur J Pharmacol. 2009 May 21;610(1-3):42-8.
Epub 2009 Mar 19.
[3] Kumar,
A. et al. 2007. Neuroprotective effects of resveratrol against
intracerebroventricular colchicine-induced cognitive impairment and oxidative
stress in rats. Pharmacology.79 (1): 17-26. DOI: 10.1159/000097511
[4] Abraham,
J., and Johnson, R. W. 2009. Consuming a diet supplemented with resveratrol
reduced infection-related neuroinflammation and deficits in working memory in
aged mice. Rejuvenation research. 12 (6): 445-453. DOI:
10.1089/rej.2009.0888
[5]
Smoliga, J. M. et al. (2011). Resveratrol and health – a comprehensive review
of human clinical trials. Mol. Nutrition
Food Res. 55: 1129-1141
[6] Witte, A. V., et al. (2014)
Effects of resveratrol on memory performance, hippocampal functional
connectivity, and glucose metabolism in healthy older adults. J. Neuroscience.
34 23): 7862-7870.
"Memory Medic's latest book is for seniors (Improve Your Memory for a Healthy Brain. Memory Is the Canary in Your Brain's Coal Mine," available in inexpensive e-book format at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/496252. See also his recent book, "Mental Biology. The New Science of How the Brain and Mind Relate" (Prometheus).
Resveratrol (3,5,4'-trihydroxy-trans-stilbene) is a stilbenoid, a type of natural phenol, and a phytoalexin produced naturally by several plants in response to injury or when the plant is under attack by pathogens such as bacteria or fungi. Food sources of resveratrol include the skin of grapes, Resveratrol
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