Green Mediterranean Diet Linked to Slower Brain Aging
News

Green Mediterranean Diet May Slow Brain Aging

Trial participants who followed a plant-forward Mediterranean diet that included green tea lowered certain biomarkers associated with accelerated brain aging.
Green Mediterranean Diet May Slow Brain Aging
Guille Faingold/Stocksy
Research has consistently shown that the Mediterranean diet offers numerous health benefits, including lowering the risk of chronic disease and improving gut and brain health.

 A new study suggests that following a “green” Mediterranean diet that includes a few specific superfoods and fewer animal products could slow cognitive aging and protect the brain.

Several factors influence brain age, including actual (chronological) age, genetics, and lifestyle, says Dafna Pachter, a PhD student at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel and the study’s first author. “We have ways to influence brain age, and that was the purpose of the trial: to examine how diet affects markers involved in this process.”

By examining changes in certain blood proteins called biomarkers for study participants who followed a green Mediterranean diet over 18 months, researchers observed “in real life how lifestyle and dietary changes affect the aging process,” Pachter says.

“This approach offers a dynamic view of brain health, allowing us to detect biological changes long before symptoms appear. By mapping these protein signatures, we gain valuable insights into how interventions like diet may help maintain cognitive function as we age.”

What Is the Green Mediterranean Diet?

A traditional Mediterranean diet emphasizes:

  • Large amounts of fruits, vegetables, and whole grains, along with healthy fats from nuts, seeds, and olive oil
  • Moderate amounts of dairy, fish, and red wine
  • Small amounts of red meat, eggs, processed foods, refined grains, and added sugars

The green Mediterranean diet is a modified version that suggests cutting out or drastically reducing animal products in favor of more plant-based foods, says Martha Theran, RDN, who works at the Pritikin Longevity Center in Miami.

The latest study, published in Clinical Nutrition, zeroed in on foods rich in plant compounds called polyphenols, which have been shown to have anti-inflammatory and antioxidant benefits.

This way of eating “is one of the most powerful tools we have for protecting both heart and brain health,” Theran says.

Green Mediterranean Diet May Slow Brain Aging

To evaluate the effects of diet on brain age, researchers analyzed data from nearly 300 participants in the DIRECT PLUS trial, a long-running study on the link between diet and brain health.

Participants were randomly selected to follow one of three diets over 18 months:

  • A standard healthy diet
  • A traditional Mediterranean diet with walnuts
  • A green Mediterranean diet that was low in red and processed meat and incorporated walnuts, green tea, and an aquatic superfood called Mankai.

MRIs were used to measure brain age. Researchers also measured 87 different protein biomarkers in participants’ blood to see if they “differed among participants with different brain aging trajectories and whether these differences were affected by diet,” Pachter says.

They found that higher levels of two proteins — galectin-9 (Gal-9) and decorin (DCN) — were associated with accelerated brain aging. However, these protein levels decreased over the 18 months in participants who followed a green Mediterranean diet.

“This indicates a potential positive effect on biological processes related to brain aging through blood protein modulation,” says Pachter, adding that the findings “highlight the importance of adopting a healthy dietary pattern, particularly the green Mediterranean diet, rich in polyphenols, as a potential way to protect our brain.”

A Green Mediterranean Diet May Come With Several Health Benefits

Brain aging involves the gradual loss of neurons and shrinking brain tissue, which can lead to cognitive decline and other neurological issues, Pachter says.

“While aging itself cannot be prevented, our study examined how an 18-month dietary intervention might influence these processes,” she says.

The results of the latest study align with previous work by the same team. A trial published in 2022 showed that both traditional and green Mediterranean diets slowed age-related brain atrophy (shrinkage) by about 50 percent over 18 months.

Another study published in 2024 showed that both diets improved blood sugar control and had neuroprotective effects on brain age.

“The green Mediterranean diet appears to amplify the benefits of the traditional Mediterranean diet by placing a greater emphasis on polyphenol-rich foods, such as green tea, walnuts, and other plant-based foods,” Theran says. “While the traditional Mediterranean diet is already very healthy, the ‘green' version fine-tunes it to target brain health more directly.”

The brain-protecting benefits seen in this study suggest that a green Mediterranean diet could be a potential drug-free way to slow age-related brain decline, Theran says.

The Study Has Limitations

The trial primarily included men, Pachter says, “so applicability to women requires confirmation.”

The team used MRIs to determine each participant’s so-called brain age, which provides a “robust biomarker,” Pachter says, but it’s not a clinical diagnosis or direct pre- or post-intervention cognitive measure.

Next, Pachter says her team plans to expand and validate additional variables that could serve as early indicators of increased risks for cognitive decline. She says this may enable intervention before symptoms appear.

Tips for Adopting a Green Mediterranean Diet

To boost the brain-protecting potential of a Mediterranean diet, Theran suggests “greening” your plate with these tips:

  • Add one to two cups of green tea to your daily routine.
  • Eat a handful of walnuts most days.
  • Include more leafy greens and plant proteins, such as lentils, beans, tofu, nuts, Mankai, and other greens.
  • Reduce your intake of red and processed meats. Choose fish, poultry, or plant-based proteins instead.
  • Get more polyphenols by eating more berries, herbs, olive oil, and green vegetables.

The study results suggest that these small tweaks “can create measurable differences in brain aging markers,” Theran says.

EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Diet Review: The Mediterranean Diet. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. April 2023.
  2. Pachter D et al. Serum Galectin-9 and Decorin in relation to brain aging and the green-Mediterranean diet: A secondary analysis of the DIRECT PLUS randomized trial. Clinical Nutrition. October 2025.
  3. Foods Rich in Polyphenols — and Why They’re Important. Cleveland Clinic. August 16, 2023.
  4. Kaplan A et al. The effect of a high-polyphenol Mediterranean diet (Green-MED) combined with physical activity on age-related brain atrophy: the Dietary Intervention Randomized Controlled Trial Polyphenols Unprocessed Study (DIRECT PLUS). The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. May 2022.
  5. Pachter D et al. Glycemic control contributes to the neuroprotective effects of Mediterranean and green-Mediterranean diets on brain age: the DIRECT PLUS brain-magnetic resonance imaging randomized controlled trial. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. November 2024.

Tom Gavin

Fact-Checker

Tom Gavin joined Everyday Health as copy chief in 2022 after a lengthy stint as a freelance copy editor. He has a bachelor's degree in psychology from College of the Holy Cross.

Prior to working for Everyday Health, he wrote, edited, copyedited, and fact-checked for books, magazines, and digital content covering a range of topics, including women's health, lifestyle, recipes, restaurant reviews, travel, and more. His clients have included Frommer's, Time-Life, and Google, among others.

He lives in Brooklyn, New York, where he likes to spend his time making music, fixing too-old electronics, and having fun with his family and the dog who has taken up residence in their home.

Erica Sweeney

Erica Sweeney

Author

Erica Sweeney has been a journalist for more than two decades. These days, she mostly covers health and wellness as a freelance writer. Her work regularly appears in The New York Times, Men’s Health, HuffPost, Self, and many other publications. She has a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, where she previously worked in local media and still lives.