
doi: 10.1002/alz.12486
pmid: 34757699
AbstractThe role of nutrition has been investigated for decades under the assumption of one‐size‐fits‐all. Yet there is heterogeneity in metabolic and neurobiological responses to diet. Thus a more personalized approach may better fit biological reality and have increased efficacy to prevent dementia. Personalized nutrition builds on the food exposome, defined as the history of diet‐related exposures over the lifetime, and on its interactions with the genome and other biological characteristics (eg, metabolism, the microbiome) to shape health. We review current advances of personalized nutrition in dementia research. We discuss key questions, success milestones, and future roadmap from observational epidemiology to clinical studies through basic science. A personalized nutrition approach based on the best prescription for the most appropriate target population in the most relevant time‐window has the potential to strengthen dementia‐prevention efforts.
Individualized prevention, precision medicine, Nutritional Status, exposome, Nutrigenomics, prevention, Risk factors in epidemiology, risk factors in epidemiology, Humans, individualized prevention, Precision Medicine, precision nutrition, Nutrition, Prevention, Precision medicine, Precision nutrition, Diet, Exposome, nutrition, [SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie, Dementia, diet
Individualized prevention, precision medicine, Nutritional Status, exposome, Nutrigenomics, prevention, Risk factors in epidemiology, risk factors in epidemiology, Humans, individualized prevention, Precision Medicine, precision nutrition, Nutrition, Prevention, Precision medicine, Precision nutrition, Diet, Exposome, nutrition, [SDV.SPEE] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie, Dementia, diet
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