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Eating plenty of fruit and vegetables can help to protect the brain against Alzheimer’s

Dementia costs the UK £26billion a year, but simple lifestyle changes could prevent thousands more people developing the tragic disease

EATING healthy grub can help to protect the brain against Alzheimer’s, a study shows.

Scans prove people who scoff lots of fruit and veg and exercise regularly have less harmful debris that builds up in their brain and causes the illness.

Healthy lifestyle reduces build-up of sticky brain plaques which lead to Alzheimer’s, scientists show.
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Healthy lifestyle reduces build-up of sticky brain plaques which lead to Alzheimer’'sCredit: Getty Images

Scientists have suspected for years that a healthy lifestyle, which includes drinking less booze, protected against the disease.

But this is the first study to clearly demonstrate the effects on the brain.

Exercise has also been found to have a key impact on the development of dementia-triggering brain plaques
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Exercise has also been found to have a key impact on the development of dementiaCredit: Getty Images

Alzheimer’s affects 850,000 and along with other forms of dementia costs the UK an estimated £26billion a year.

The study, by the University of California, Los Angeles, involved 44 adults aged 40 to 85. They underwent brain scans for plaques and tangles, the deadly deposits which trigger dementia.

The research was carried out at the University of California
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The research was carried out at the University of CaliforniaCredit: Getty Images

Those who were a healthy weight, exercised regularly and had a healthy diet involving moderate amounts of alcohol had much smaller deposits.

Researchers were surprised at the impact healthy living had, especially as the tests only involved people who suffered with minor memory loss, rather than full-blown dementia.

The study is the first time the effects of a healthy lifestyle on the brain have been demonstrated
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The study is the first time the effects of a healthy lifestyle on the brain have been demonstratedCredit: Getty Images

Dr David Merrill said: “The fact we could detect this influence of lifestyle at a molecular level before the beginning of serious memory problems surprised us.

“It reinforces the importance of living a healthy life, even before the development of clinically significant dementia.”

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