The American journal of clinical nutrition
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Higher circulating antioxidant concentrations are associated with a lower risk of late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD) in observational studies, suggesting that diet-sourced antioxidants may be modifiable targets for reducing disease risk. However, observational evidence is prone to substantial biases that limit causal inference, including residual confounding and reverse causation. ⋯ Our findings suggest that higher exposure to ascorbate, β-carotene, retinol, or urate does not lower the risk of AD. Replication Mendelian randomization studies could assess this further, providing larger AD case-control samples and, ideally, using additional variants to instrument each exposure.
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To date, Healthy Eating Index 2015 (HEI-2015) scores have not been published in the peer-reviewed literature for nationally representative samples of American children. ⋯ The diet quality of American children remains low overall, with continued disparities across some sociodemographic populations, notably age and race or ethnicity. The results of these analyses can help guide the efforts of child nutrition researchers, practitioners, and other stakeholders.