Association of Higher Mediterranean Diet Adherence With Lower Prevalence of Disability and Symptom Severity, Depression, Anxiety, Stress, Sleep Quality, Cognitive Impairment, and Physical Inactivity in Older Adults With Multiple Sclerosis.
Christina TryfonosEleni PavlidouTheofanis VorvolakosOlga AlexatouKonstantinos VadikoliasMaria MentzelouGerasimos TsourouflisAspasia SerdariGeorgios AntasourasSousana K PapadopoulouExakousti-Petroula AggelakouConstantinos GiaginisPublished in: Journal of geriatric psychiatry and neurology (2023)
A good nutritional status and healthy diets may decelerate disease disability and symptom severity and quality of life of peoples with multiple sclerosis (MS). Mediterranean diet (MD) can prevent several chronic diseases, including neurodegenerative disease. This is an observational, cross-sectional study on 279 older adults with MS, aiming to investigate the effects of MD against several aspects of mental health. Qualified questionnaires were used to assess disability and symptom severity, depression, anxiety, stress, sleep quality, cognitive status, physical activity, and MD adherence. Multivariate analysis showed that enhanced MD adherence was independently associated with lower prevalence of disability and symptom severity ( P = .0019), depression ( P = .0201), anxiety ( P = .0287), perceived stress ( P = .0021), inadequate sleep quality ( P = .0033), cognitive impairment ( P = .0018) and physical inactivity ( P = .0028). Adopting MD may ameliorate mental health disturbances in older adults with MS. Future public health policies should inform older adults with MS for the favorable impacts of MD in improving the mental health MS comorbidities.