Diets ●●●○ Moderate

Anti-Inflammatory Diet for Brain Health

Chronic low-grade neuroinflammation is increasingly recognized as a contributing factor in depression, anxiety, brain fog, and cognitive decline — not just in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease where it has long been known. The anti-inflammatory diet approach focuses on reducing dietary drivers of inflammation (excess omega-6, refined carbohydrates, ultra-processed foods, alcohol) while increasing anti-inflammatory foods (fatty fish, colorful vegetables, berries, olive oil, turmeric, green tea). The evidence is strongest for omega-3 fatty acids and flavonoids, with moderate support for Mediterranean-style dietary patterns. The approach is safe, broadly beneficial, and best implemented as a long-term eating pattern.

March 20, 2026 · 12 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Brain Nutrients ●●●● Strong

Caffeine and Cognition: The Complete Picture

Caffeine’s cognitive effects are real but limited: it reliably improves alertness, attention, and reaction time in the acute timeframe (1-3 hours post-consumption) through adenosine A1 and A2A receptor blockade. However, these effects diminish substantially with regular use due to tolerance development. The key tension is that caffeine improves performance while masking sleep deprivation — which itself causes cognitive harm. Chronic, high-dose caffeine consumption is associated with anxiety, insomnia, and cardiovascular effects in susceptible individuals. The practical takeaway: moderate caffeine (100-200 mg, roughly 1-2 cups of coffee) used strategically — not daily — preserves its effect and minimizes the tolerance and withdrawal problem.

March 20, 2026 · 15 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Brain Nutrients ●●●○ Moderate

Magnesium and the Brain: Which Form Actually Works?

Magnesium is critical for brain function — it regulates neurotransmitter synthesis, NMDA receptor activity, synaptic plasticity, and the HPA axis stress response. However, most common magnesium supplements (oxide, citrate) have poor bioavailability and do not effectively cross the blood-brain barrier. Magnesium L-threonate (Magtein) is specifically designed to cross the BBB and has shown promise in animal and early human studies for cognitive outcomes. Magnesium glycinate provides high bioavailability and is excellent for sleep and anxiety through the glycine co-transporter. The practical takeaway: match the form to the goal — threonate for cognitive protection, glycinate for sleep and anxiety, citrate for general supplementation if cost is a constraint.

March 20, 2026 · 12 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Science ●●●○ Moderate

Seed Oils and Brain Health: What Does the Evidence Actually Say?

Seed oils — primarily soybean, corn, cottonseed, sunflower, and canola — are the dominant source of omega-6 linoleic acid in the modern Western diet. The concern that this has driven excessive omega-6 intake, promoting neuroinflammation and oxidative stress in the brain, is mechanistically plausible but human evidence remains mixed. RCTs show mixed cardiovascular effects, observational data on brain outcomes is limited, and the few intervention studies directly measuring cognitive outcomes show no clear benefit or harm. The practical takeaway: the quality of your overall dietary pattern matters far more than eliminating seed oils specifically.

March 20, 2026 · 11 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Diets ●●●○ Moderate

The Green-Mediterranean Diet: New Research on Slowing Brain Aging

The Green-Mediterranean diet — a modified Mediterranean diet that replaces red meat with plant-based protein sources including Mankai duckweed and green tea, and adds walnuts — was shown in a 2025 randomized controlled trial to reduce brain age by approximately 1.5 years compared to a standard healthy diet, and by 0.5 years compared to a traditional Mediterranean diet. The benefit appears to be driven by the exceptionally high polyphenol and flavonoid content of these added plant foods, which reduce neuroinflammation and oxidative stress. This is one of the most promising recent findings in nutritional neuroscience.

March 20, 2026 · 11 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Diets ●●●○ Moderate

Meal Timing and Mental Performance: When You Eat Matters

When you eat may matter nearly as much as what you eat for cognitive performance. Research links meal timing to circadian metabolic rhythms, postprandial cognitive dips, and next-day mental clarity. Front-loading calories toward the morning, managing meal size before demanding tasks, and aligning eating windows with your biological clock are practical, evidence-supported strategies for sustaining sharper thinking throughout the day.

March 14, 2026 · 19 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Brain Conditions ●●●● Moderate to Strong

ADHD and Sugar: What the Research Actually Shows

The belief that sugar causes hyperactivity in children is one of the most persistent nutrition myths. Multiple meta-analyses and double-blind trials show no direct causal link between sugar consumption and ADHD symptoms. However, the story is more nuanced than simple exoneration — glycemic instability, refined carbohydrate patterns, and individual food sensitivities can genuinely influence attention and behavior.

March 13, 2026 · 17 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Brain Conditions ●●●○ Moderate

Best Foods for ADHD: An Evidence-Based Guide

What does the research actually say about diet and ADHD? We review the evidence on omega-3 fatty acids, protein, key micronutrients, elimination diets, and practical meal strategies for better focus and executive function.

March 13, 2026 · 16 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Brain Nutrients ●●●● Strong

Omega-3 and Brain Health: DHA vs EPA, Dosage, and Sources

Omega-3 fatty acids — especially DHA — are among the most well-supported nutrients for brain health. We break down the differences between DHA and EPA, review the strongest clinical evidence, compare food sources to supplements, and offer practical guidance on dosage and form.

March 12, 2026 · 17 min · ProCognitiveDiet
Diets ●●●● Moderate (animal strong, human limited)

Calorie Restriction and Brain Aging: What the Research Shows

Calorie restriction is the most replicated dietary intervention for extending lifespan and healthspan in animal models, with robust evidence that it preserves brain structure and function in aging rodents and primates. The mechanisms — SIRT1 activation, mTOR suppression, enhanced autophagy, and BDNF upregulation — are well characterized. However, human evidence for cognitive benefits remains limited, resting primarily on the CALERIE trial and a handful of smaller studies. We examine what CR can and cannot do for the aging brain, who should consider it, and who should not.

March 11, 2026 · 24 min · ProCognitiveDiet