Diets which allow comfort foods like pasta, toast and other carbohydrates but limit red meat and protein may help keep dementia at bay, according to a study on brain ageing.

Despite the popularity of low-carb living among health fanatics and those seeking to maintain a trim figure, it appears the secret to keeping mentally fit in your later years might lie in restricting protein, researchers in Australia found.

 

While the study was conducted in mice, it is modelled on diets in parts of the world with some of the longest healthy life expectancy, such as Okinawa in Japan and in the Mediterranean.

It found that diets where protein was kept to around 5-10 per cent but calories from carbohydrates were increased had the best results. The authors say this could be a more palatable option than giving up starchy staples.

 

“There are currently no effective pharmaceutical treatments for dementia – we can slow these diseases, but we can’t stop them – so it’s exciting that we are starting to identify diets that are impacting how the brain ages,” said Devin Wahl, author of the study published in the journal Cell Reports.