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GMJ News > Research Digest > New Studies > Daily Eggs Linked to 27% Lower Alzheimer’s Risk in Major 15-Year Study
New Studies

Daily Eggs Linked to 27% Lower Alzheimer’s Risk in Major 15-Year Study

GMJ
Last updated: 25/05/2026 17:07
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GMJ Research Desk
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Scientific illustration showing eggs and brain health connection with statistical data
A 15-year study of nearly 40,000 older adults reveals that eating 5+ eggs weekly correlates with 27% lower Alzheimer's risk. The research challenges decades of cholesterol restrictions while highlighting eggs' unique neuroprotective nutrients. — Photo: Sophia Martin / Pexels
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🎧 Listen to this article5:39 min · 814 words · GMJ Audio

Updated 25/05/2026

Contents
      • Egg Consumption and Alzheimer’s Risk Reduction
  • Massive cohort reveals dose-response relationship
  • Choline emerges as key protective mechanism
  • Phospholipid delivery enhances brain uptake
  • Observational limitations require careful interpretation
    • Key takeaways
  • Frequently asked questions
    • How many eggs should older adults eat for brain health?
    • Why were eggs previously considered harmful?
3 min read|624 words

A major cohort study following nearly 40,000 older adults for 15 years has found that regular egg consumption is associated with significantly lower rates of Alzheimer’s disease, challenging decades of dietary advice that treated eggs as a cardiovascular threat.

27%
Lower Alzheimer’s incidence among adults eating 5+ eggs per week vs. never-eaters

Egg Consumption and Alzheimer’s Risk Reduction

Risk reduction by frequency of egg consumption, 15-year follow-up

5+ eggs per week
27%
2-4 eggs per week
20%
1-3 eggs per month
17%

Source: Loma Linda University, 2024 | Georgian Medical Journal News

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Massive cohort reveals dose-response relationship

Researchers from Loma Linda University analyzed data from 39,498 adults aged 65 and older enrolled in the Adventist Health Study-2. Over 15.3 years of follow-up, 2,858 participants developed Alzheimer’s disease.

The study revealed a clear dose-response relationship between egg consumption and dementia risk. Those eating eggs 1-3 times monthly showed 17% lower incidence compared to never-eaters, while consumption of 2-4 eggs weekly reduced risk by 20%. The most striking finding came from participants eating five or more eggs weekly—roughly one daily—who experienced 27% lower Alzheimer’s incidence.

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For more context on recent nutritional research, our archives provide comprehensive coverage of evolving dietary science.

Choline emerges as key protective mechanism

Eggs represent a dense natural source of choline in the American diet. According to research published in the Journal of Neurobiological Aging, choline serves as the substrate for acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter that deteriorates in Alzheimer’s disease.

This connection has therapeutic implications. Donepezil, the most commonly prescribed Alzheimer’s medication, works by preventing acetylcholine breakdown—essentially preserving what remains of this crucial neurotransmitter. The disease itself is characterized by progressive loss of cholinergic neurons.

Phospholipid delivery enhances brain uptake

The form of nutrients delivered by eggs may prove as important as their presence. British Journal of Nutrition research suggests that DHA in phospholipid form enters the brain more efficiently than the triglyceride form found in most fish oil supplements.

This delivery mechanism could explain why whole food sources often outperform isolated supplements in longitudinal studies. The phospholipid matrix appears to facilitate transport across the blood-brain barrier, potentially maximizing the neuroprotective benefits of omega-3 fatty acids.

Our clinical updates section regularly covers advances in nutritional neuroscience and their practical applications.

Observational limitations require careful interpretation

Despite the impressive scale and duration of this research, important caveats limit direct clinical application. The study design is observational, meaning causation cannot be established from correlation alone. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition emphasizes this distinction in nutritional epidemiology.

Additionally, the Adventist Health Study-2 cohort skews heavily vegetarian and health-conscious, potentially limiting generalizability to broader populations. Participants choosing to eat eggs regularly within this community may differ systematically from never-eaters in ways that influence dementia risk independent of egg consumption.

Adults eating five or more eggs weekly showed 27% lower Alzheimer’s incidence over 15 years compared to never-eaters, with clear dose-response relationship across consumption levels.

— Loma Linda University researchers, Adventist Health Study-2 (2024)

Key takeaways

  • Regular egg consumption associated with up to 27% lower Alzheimer’s risk in 39,498 older adults
  • Phospholipid-form DHA in yolks may cross blood-brain barrier more efficiently than supplements
  • Observational study design prevents establishing direct causation

Frequently asked questions

How many eggs should older adults eat for brain health?

The study found maximum benefit at five or more eggs weekly (roughly one daily), but even 1-3 eggs monthly showed 17% risk reduction. Individual dietary patterns and health conditions should guide consumption decisions.

Why were eggs previously considered harmful?

1960s dietary guidelines capped cholesterol at 300mg daily due to cardiovascular concerns. Two eggs contain about 300mg cholesterol, effectively limiting consumption.

As nutritional science continues evolving, the egg story illustrates how single-nutrient focus can obscure complex food matrix benefits. Future randomized controlled trials may clarify whether the observed associations translate into direct cognitive protection, potentially reshaping dietary recommendations for healthy aging.

Source: For 50 years, eggs were treated like a cardiovascular threat

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Disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information and education. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider about your individual circumstances. Full disclaimer →

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  • Choline · Ingredient
PG
Written by
Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD
Editor-in-Chief, GMJ News
Full profile →  ·  ORCID 0000-0001-7609-4515
Medical disclaimer. This article is health journalism intended for general information. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. Always seek your physician's advice regarding any medical condition.
Medically reviewed by Prof. Giorgi Pkhakadze, MD, MPH, PhD. Spotted an error? Contact the editorial team.
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