
Mediterranean Diet Associated With Reduced Risk
Of Depression
ScienceDaily (Oct. 6, 2009) —
Individuals who follow the Mediterranean dietary pattern—rich in vegetables,
fruits, nuts, whole grains and fish—appear less likely to develop
depression, according to a report in the October issue of Archives of
General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
The lifetime prevalence of mental disorders has been found to be lower in
Mediterranean than Northern European countries, according to background
information in the article. One plausible explanation is that the diet commonly
followed in the region may be protective against depression. Previous research
has suggested that the monounsaturated fatty acids in olive oil—used
abundantly in the Mediterranean diet—may be associated with a lower risk of
severe depressive symptoms.
Almudena Sánchez-Villegas, B.Pharm., Ph.D., of University of Las Palmas de
Gran Canaria and Clinic of the University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain, and
colleagues studied 10,094 healthy Spanish participants who completed an initial
questionnaire between 1999 and 2005. Participants reported their dietary intake
on a food frequency questionnaire, and the researchers calculated their
adherence to the Mediterranean diet based on nine components (high ratio of
monounsaturated fatty acids to saturated fatty acids; moderate intake of alcohol
and dairy products; low intake of meat; and high intake of legumes, fruit and
nuts, cereals, vegetables and fish).
After a median (midpoint) of 4.4 years of follow-up, 480 new cases of
depression were identified, including 156 in men and 324 in women. Individuals
who followed the Mediterranean diet most closely had a greater than 30 percent
reduction in the risk of depression than whose who had the lowest Mediterranean
diet scores. The association did not change when the results were adjusted for
other markers of a healthy lifestyle, including marital status and use of
seatbelts.
"The specific mechanisms by which a better adherence to the
Mediterranean dietary pattern could help to prevent the occurrence of depression
are not well known," the authors write. Components of the diet may improve
blood vessel function, fight inflammation, reduce risk for heart disease and
repair oxygen-related cell damage, all of which may decrease the chances of
developing depression.
"However, the role of the overall dietary pattern may be more important
than the effect of single components. It is plausible that the synergistic
combination of a sufficient provision of omega-three fatty acids together with
other natural unsaturated fatty acids and antioxidants from olive oil and nuts,
flavonoids and other phytochemicals from fruit and other plant foods and large
amounts of natural folates and other B vitamins in the overall Mediterranean
dietary pattern may exert a fair degree of protection against depression,"
the authors write.
Journal reference:
- Almudena Sanchez-Villegas; Miguel Delgado-Rodriguez; Alvaro Alonso; Javier
Schlatter; Francisca Lahortiga; Lluis Serra Majem; Miguel Angel
Martinez-Gonzalez. Association of the Mediterranean Dietary Pattern
With the Incidence of Depression: The Seguimiento Universidad de
Navarra/University of Navarra Follow-up (SUN) Cohort. Arch Gen
Psychiatry, 2009; 66 (10): 1090-1098 [link]
Adapted from materials provided by JAMA
and Archives Journals.
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