The Truth About Brain Health Supplements
The Truth About Brain Health Supplements
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The FDA also doesn’t test supplements before they hit the shelves, and due to limited resources, it doesn’t routinely analyze the content of supplements to ensure that they are safe, effective, or even contain the ingredients listed on the label, per the FDA website.
Given this hands-off, buyer-beware approach, educating yourself about brain health supplements is essential. Here’s what top experts on cognitive health and supplements have to say about which — if any — brain-boosting supplements are worth your time and money, and which ones to look out for because they may contain untested ingredients.

Who Needs Supplements?
“Broadly speaking, good nutrition is important to a lot of health outcomes, and really poor nutrition is harmful to health in a lot of ways,” says Victor Henderson, MD, the director of the Stanford Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and a professor of epidemiology and population health at Stanford Medicine in Palo Alto, California.
But if you’re talking about people in the United States who are fairly well nourished, there’s really not strong evidence that taking a supplement is going to boost cognitive outcomes or brain health, or do anything to prevent dementia, says Dr. Henderson.
Omega-3 Fatty Acid Supplements: Worth the Investment?
There has been interest in omega-3 fatty acids for brain health for a while, says Henderson. “If you look at cell membranes, cell functions, cell metabolism, it makes sense that omega-3 supplements might have an effect on the process,” he says.
Two types of omega-3s typically marketed as brain health supplements are docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and eicosatetraenoic acid.
The underlying scientific question isn’t why these substances might be important but do they really make a difference if people take them, says Henderson. “And unfortunately, the clinical trials that have been done with those kinds of supplements haven’t shown much of a difference,” he says.
RELATED: Are Omega-3 Fish Oil Supplements Worth the Money?
Are There Benefits to Phosphatidylserine?
The amount of the phosphatidylserine in your body decreases as you age, so theoretically, increasing it via a supplement could have benefits for cognitive function, says Pieter Cohen, MD, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston and a leading researcher in supplement safety at the Cambridge Health Alliance.
“There are some small studies that show it may have some benefit and some that don’t show much of anything, so right now there’s not enough to make a recommendation,” Dr. Cohen says.
As far as supplements containing herbs or other chemical substances, there isn’t strong evidence that taking these types of supplements have brain benefits either, he says.
No Quick Fixes, and Possible Harm, From Brain-Boosting Supplements
In the Wild West of the supplement industry, companies can advertise their supplement as improving memory, cognition, or brain health without any clinical trials in humans that actually show that, says Cohen.
“The advertising opportunities of the companies are really limitless, as long as they avoid specific drug claims, like ‘This will cure Alzheimer's disease.’ Something like that would strike the FDA as a drug claim,” he says.
But the truth is, there’s no supplement ingredient that you could take to feel smarter or to give you a sharper memory in a matter of days, weeks, or months — a notion that Cohen completely dismisses as possible.
“The only thing that supplements might potentially do in the future is that maybe you take it for 10 years, and it somehow slightly decreases the risk of memory loss. That’s theoretically possible, and that’s the kind of thing that's being investigated,” he says.
But companies want consumers to keep buying the supplements, absent evidence that there's a magic substance that boosts memory and thinking, says Cohen.
“This raises a situation where some companies, in an effort to try to match or keep up with what they’ve advertised, then reach for illegal drugs, experimental drugs, or unapproved or foreign drugs,” he says.
What ‘Clinically Tested’ Really Means (Spoiler Alert: Not Much)
Does buying a supplement that’s advertised as “clinically tested” ensure that it has evidence to back up any claims? Nope.
“Because ‘clinically tested’ isn’t a regulated, defined term in the supplement world, it doesn’t even mean it's been through a clinical trial,” says Henderson.
In that context, "clinically tested" just means it’s been tested on people, but it could have been tested on a half a dozen college students, family members of a supplement executive, or just about anyone, he says.
“A supplement labeled ‘clinically tested’ could also mean that it really was tested in an actual clinical trial — it probably does not, but it could. If you want to know for certain, go to ClinicalTrials.gov, where all clinical trials are registered. Put in the name of the compound and search to see if there are clinical trials have been completed or are currently underway,” says Henderson.
Can Multivitamins Preserve Memory or Cognitive Function?
Multivitamin benefits were observed in three nonoverlapping groups of people enrolled in the same parent trial, says co-author Laura D. Baker, PhD, a professor of gerontology and geriatric medicine at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. "That increases our confidence that daily multivitamin supplementation holds promise as a strategy to support cognitive health in older adults,” Dr. Baker says.
Researchers found evidence of multivitamin benefits for both global cognition and episodic memory, which they estimated added up to slowed global cognitive aging by an estimated two years compared with a placebo.
However, researchers don’t have an explanation why supplementing with a multivitamin would improve cognitive health in people without any vitamin deficiencies, and more research is needed to see if the findings can be confirmed in studies with real-world outcomes, says Cohen. “At this point, I’m not going to recommend multivitamins to my patients as a way to maintain or improve their memory,” he says.
Baker agrees that it’s too early for widespread recommendations on multivitamins to preserve cognitive function or memory.
“Although the trials increased our confidence, it’s important to note that the group studied here was predominantly white and well educated. We don’t know about efficacy and safety in underrepresented groups that are at a higher risk for cardiovascular and other co-morbidities,” she says. Investigators are planning a new trial that aims to address this issue, adds Baker.
Bottom Line: Brain Health Supplements Aren’t Ready for Prime Time
Experts generally agree that there isn’t enough evidence to recommend any type of supplement for brain health — at least not yet.
“I think that there are some interesting scientific questions swirling around some types of supplements that need to be sorted out, and maybe there will be a role for supplements and cognition in the future. But we’re not there yet,” says Cohen.
Henderson agrees: “The supplement industry is a huge multibillion-dollar industry, and there's very little evidence behind any of them. There are some mechanisms in the brain where it seems plausible that certain ingredients may help preserve function, but as of right now, any clinical data in humans showing that they have any positive effect is weak.”
Because nothing is ready for prime time, Cohen doesn’t recommend any types of vitamins or supplements to improve cognition, decrease memory loss, or reduce the risk of dementia including Alzheimer’s disease.
“If a patient really wants to take a multivitamin every day, I don’t think the evidence is strong enough to recommend that, but I’m not going to spend a lot of time during the visit trying to talk them out of it, because it’s not going to harm them to do that,” Cohen says.
Although supplements aren’t the key to maintaining brain health, many lifestyle changes are associated with reduced risk of cognitive impairment and dementia.
Evidence-Based Ways to Improve Brain Health
Money spent on health supplements would be better spent on a healthy lifestyle — for example, eating healthy foods, getting physical activity, and taking any prescribed medications to help manage chronic conditions, says Henderson.
Questions to Ask Your Doctor
- Should I be screened for cognitive impairment?
- What can I do now to improve my overall health?
- What steps would likely improve my memory and ability to concentrate?
- Will a specific diet or certain foods help prevent Alzheimer’s disease?
- What types of exercise will improve my brain health, and how much do I need to do?

David Weisman, MD
Medical Reviewer
David Weisman, MD, is the director of the Clinical Trial Center at Abington Neurological Associates in Pennsylvania, where he has conducted numerous clinical trials into mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer’s disease to develop disease-modifying drugs.
Dr. Weisman has dedicated his research career toward advancing new therapies for Alzheimer’s disease, focusing on clinical trials for the prevention and treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, mild cognitive impairment, and other dementias, and he devotes his clinical practice to memory and cognitive problems.
He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Franklin and Marshall College, then an MD from Penn State College of Medicine. After an internship at St. Mary’s Hospital in San Francisco, he completed his neurology residency at Yale, where he served as chief resident. He then went to the University California in San Diego for fellowship training in Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
Weisman has published papers and studies in journals such as Neurology, JAMA Neurology, Stroke, and The New England Journal of Medicine, among others.

Becky Upham
Author
Becky Upham has worked throughout the health and wellness world for over 25 years. She's been a race director, a team recruiter for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, a salesperson for a major pharmaceutical company, a blogger for Moogfest, a communications manager for Mission Health, a fitness instructor, and a health coach.
Upham majored in English at the University of North Carolina and has a master's in English writing from Hollins University.
Upham enjoys teaching cycling classes, running, reading fiction, and making playlists.
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