NEW
YORK - Taking daily soy supplements
doesn't improve thinking and memory skills or keep them from declining in older
women, new findings suggest.
The
study of 313 postmenopausal women showed those who took 25 extra grams of soy
protein each day improved slightly more than other women on a test of visual
memory, or remembering faces. But there was no difference in their overall
cognitive skills, compared to women who were given regular milk protein.
Studies
have typically come to conflicting or disappointing findings on the role of soy
in easing hot flashes and other symptoms of menopause, as well as treating high
cholesterol and build-up in the arteries.
And
there's been some worry that soy may be risky for breast cancer survivors,
though new research has partially eased those concerns.
Regardless
of any other effects, the nutritional benefits of soy - including high protein
and fiber and low fat --may make it a good diet addition for some people,
researchers said.
"There
might be a lot of reasons why healthy middle-aged older women might want to
take soy supplements, but cognitive function shouldn't be the driving reason
for that," Dr. Victor Henderson, the study's lead author from Stanford
University, told Reuters Health.
Researchers
have thought certain natural plant-derived chemicals in soy might affect
changes that happen during menopause, including disturbances in memory, because
of their similarity to estrogen produced by the body.
For the
new study, Henderson and his colleagues gave women age 45 to 92 a battery of
thinking and memory tests, then randomly assigned them to take 25 grams of soy
or milk protein supplements, offered in bar and powder form, each day for two
and a half years.
Over
the study period, women in both groups tended to improve in their overall
thinking and memory skills - probably because they'd all taken the tests once
before.
However,
there was no difference in their improvement on the combination of cognitive
tests - or on any individual exam other than visual memory - based on what type
of protein supplement the women were taking, the researchers reported Monday in
the journal Neurology.
That
was also the case when Henderson's team looked specifically at women younger
than 60, who had more recently gone through menopause and may have had more to
gain from the extra soy.
It's
possible soy might still be beneficial for cognition and health in general, but
that starting the supplements after menopause is too late to reap any benefits,
according to William Wong, who has studied soy in older women at Baylor College
of Medicine in Houston, Texas.
"We
are all looking for a magic bullet," he told Reuters Health. "But we
don't ever think about, well, women in Asian countries have been taking that
product (soy) since birth, essentially. There could be some long-term effect
that we don't see in the US"
Wong,
who wasn't involved in the new study, said one limitation of the research is
the relatively small group of women involved and the large variation in age and
time since menopause - which might make it harder to determine a specific group
of women that could benefit from soy.
Still,
he said his own findings on the effect of soy supplements on bone health and
blood pressure have been "discouraging."
One
recent study of women with a history of breast cancer, however, did suggest
those who ate a lot of soy were 25 per cent less likely to have their cancer
come back - despite some concern about the estrogen-like effects of soy in
breast cancer survivors.
Henderson's
team concluded that postmenopausal women should not take soy with the goal of
improving their cognitive skills, but that they can eat a diet high in soy if
they choose, without worrying that it may have any negative effects on memory.
Reuters
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