By Patrick Holford
Your brain consumes more energy than any other organ, burning either glucose or ketones.
This combustion creates oxidants that age your brain.
The ability to rapidly extinguish these oxidants, which ultimately age your brain and body, is what helps you live longer with less wrinkles, more flexible joints, healthier blood vessels and organs, especially your brain. Your brain has 400 miles of blood vessels. Keeping oxidants down is perhaps the single most important thing you can do for vascular health. Vascular dementia, for example, is strongly associated with oxidation. It is oxidised cholesterol that predicts heart attacks (along with raised homocysteine).
For those who have been following our ‘four horsemen of the mental health apocalypse’, oxidation is the fourth horseman. Check out this film to understand how key antioxidants work together. Those with diets high in antioxidant foods literally halve their risk for dementia compared to those with low intakes, according to a study last year of 2,716 people aged over 60. (1)
The key antioxidants are vitamins C, E, glutathione, anthocyanidins (in blue/red foods), lipoic acid and co-enzyme Q10. The most important of these are vitamin C and glutathione.
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Also, critical antioxidants such as vitamin C and vitamin E, if supplemented together, reduced the risk of developing Alzheimer’s by as much as two-thirds. Taking either, cut risk by a quarter in a study of 4,740 elderly residents of Cache County, Utah. (2)
A review of all studies to date show, that ‘either a high vitamin E or C intake showed a trend of attenuating risk by about 26 per cent’ according to China’s leading prevention expert Professor Jin Tai Yu of Fudan University in Shanghai, making these nutrients ‘grade 1’ top level prevention factor. (3)
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Now, I’m sure you eat fruit and vegetables and supplement vitamin C but how do you know you’ve optimised your anti-oxidation potential? After all, the variation in antioxidants is 40-fold! Even in organic produce.
There is only one way to do this accurately, due to a breakthrough that we’ve made working with top analytical chemists.
The way in which these harmful oxidants (think of them like mini fires or bursts of heat) are ‘extinguished’ is to effectively ‘cool’ them. Otherwise they bump into things, like arteries, cholesterol, fats and ‘burn’ them setting up a chain reaction of damage.
That cooling is largely done by either glutathione (GSH) or vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid). They are the firemen. But, when they leave a fire zone they too become hot or oxidised. Oxidised vitamin C is called DiHydroAscorbicAcid, or DHAA. Oxidised glutathione is called GSSG.
Vitamin C helps ‘reload’ glutathione and glutathione helps reload vitamin C as you’ll see in the figures below. This glutathione-vitamin C cycle is one of the hottest discoveries in anti-ageing science. You’ll see that niacin (vitamin B3) and its cousin NAD are involved.
People with cognitive decline and dementia have less glutathione and more oxidised glutathione and an ever decreasing ability to recycle the spent/oxidised glutathione back to functional glutathione. Read the science here. That is why we recommend anyone with concerns about their cognitive health measure their glutathione index.
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By measuring a pin prick of your blood in our new test kit both how much glutathione you have in your cells AND how much is oxidised you will know if you’ve got the ability to extinguish those ageing fires in your brain and body optimally. (Technically, it is the ratio between active glutathione (GSH) and spent glutathione (GSSG) or GSH/GSSG.)
You want your score to be above 500. We could call this your Fortune 500 because fortunately, with this score, you’ve got the power to stay young.
If your score was 100 that’s really not good. If you smoke, live in a polluted environment, rarely eat fruit, vegetables, herbs and spices, that’s where you’d be.
The difference between 500 and 100 could literally be a decade less life!
So, rather than guess, why not find out by testing your Glutathione Index?
These at home test kits are now available internationally! (UK, EU, USA & AUS!)
Knowing your Glutathione Index lets us advise you on what you need to eat and supplement to anti-age your brain. This is all included in your ‘interpretation of results’. Your Glutathione Index will also become part of your DRIfT score (Dementia Risk Index functional Test score) – you are aiming for a DRIfT score for ‘0’ which means, biologically, you have a super-healthy brain (and body).
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So you are fully in the loop, other labs test red cell Glutathione. This is good but not nearly as good as the ratio of GSH/GSSG. It also tends to cost around £150 and requires a blood draw at a lab.
But we’ve found out something rather disturbing.
Since glutathione is such a powerful antioxidant the second it leaves your body it starts to oxidise simply from interacting with air. That is why many blood tests, and studies based on them, are not so accurate. We have solved this by adding a super strong ‘fixer’ to the dry blood spot target where you drip your drop of blood. Problem solved!
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When you order your Glutathione test – which you can buy as a single test here OR as part of the DRIfT 5 in 1 test bundle here you can become a part of our team of Citizen Scientists!
You also need to complete your Cognitive Function Test which is FREE and together with any blood test results you get, give you personalised information on what you need to do to optimise your brain AND it will also contribute to our vital research – thank you.
Thank you for reading!
Food for the Brain is a non-for-profit educational and research charity that offers a free Cognitive Function Test and assesses your Dementia Risk Index to be able to advise you on how to dementia-proof your diet and lifestyle.
By completing the Cognitive Function Test you are joining our grassroots research initiative to find out what really works for preventing cognitive decline. We share our ongoing research results with you to help you make brain-friendly choices.
Please support our research by becoming a Friend of Food for the Brain.
1 Peng, M., et al. Dietary Total Antioxidant Capacity and Cognitive Function in Older Adults. J Nutr Health Aging (2023).
2 Basambombo LL, Carmichael PH, Côté S, Laurin D. Use of Vitamin E and C Supplements for the Prevention of Cognitive Decline. Ann Pharmacother. 2017 Feb;51(2):118-124. doi: 10.1177/1060028016673072. Epub 2016 Oct 5. PMID: 27708183.
3 Yu JT, Xu W, Tan CC, Andrieu S, Suckling J, Evangelou E, Pan A, Zhang C, Jia J, Feng L, Kua EH, Wang YJ, Wang HF, Tan MS, Li JQ, Hou XH, Wan Y, Tan L, Mok V, Tan L, Dong Q, Touchon J, Gauthier S, Aisen PS, Vellas B. Evidence-based prevention of Alzheimer’s disease: systematic review and meta-analysis of 243 observational prospective studies and 153 randomised controlled trials. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2020;91(11):1201-9. Epub 2020/07/22. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2019-321913. PubMed PMID: 32690803; PMCID: PMC7569385.