Long-Term Intake of Red Meat in Relation to Dementia Risk and Cognitive Function in US Adults

Jan 15, 2025Neurology

Long-Term Red Meat Eating Linked to Dementia Risk and Thinking Skills in US Adults

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Abstract

Participants consuming processed red meat at ≥0.25 servings per day had a 13% higher risk of dementia compared to those consuming <0.10 servings per day.

  • Higher processed red meat intake is associated with a 14% increased risk of self-reported cognitive decline.
  • Each additional serving of processed red meat per day is linked to accelerated aging in global cognition by 1.61 years.
  • Intake of unprocessed red meat at ≥1.00 servings per day is associated with a 16% higher risk of self-reported cognitive decline.
  • Replacing one serving of processed red meat with nuts and legumes may reduce dementia risk by 19% and cognitive aging by 1.37 years.

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