4.7 Review

Systematic Review on the Potential Effect of Berry Intake in the Cognitive Functions of Healthy People

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14142977

Keywords

berries; cognition; human intervention studies; systematic review

Funding

  1. APC central fund of the University of Milan

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This systematic review examines the impact of berries supplementation on cognitive function in healthy adults and the elderly. The findings suggest that berries supplementation has positive effects on cognitive domains such as attention, executive functioning, memory, motor skills and construction, and processing speed. These effects were consistent across multiple studies and methodologies, indicating the need for further research to endorse the consumption of berries in healthy populations to prevent cognitive decline.
The increase in life expectancy poses health challenges, such as increasing the impairment of cognitive functions. Berries show a neuroprotective effect thanks to flavonoids, able to reduce neuroinflammatory and to increase neuronal connections. The aim of this systematic review is to explore the impact of berries supplementation on cognitive function in healthy adults and the elderly. Twelve studies were included for a total of 399 participants, aged 18-81 years (mean age: 41.8 +/- 4.7 years). Six studies involved young adults (23.9 +/- 3.7 years), and four studies involved the elderly (60.6 +/- 6.4 years). Most studies investigated effects of a single berry product, but one used a mixture of 4 berries. Non-significant differences were detected across cognition domains and methodologies, but significant and positive effects were found for all cognitive domains (attention and concentration, executive functioning, memory, motor skills and construction, and processing speed), and in most cases they were present in more than one study and detected using different methodologies. Although some limitations should be taken into account to explain these results, the positive findings across studies and methodologies elicit further studies on this topic, to endorse the consumption of berries in healthy populations to prevent cognitive decline.

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