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Eating High-Fat Cheese Daily Associated With Lower Dementia Risk, But Milk And Yogurt Showed No Benefits
Study Finds ^ | December 24, 2025 | Dr. Yufeng Du (Lund University)

Posted on 12/24/2025 4:53:20 AM PST by Red Badger

(Photo by Önder Örtel on Unsplash)

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When it comes to brain health, not all dietary dairy is equal.

In A Nutshell

* Swedish researchers followed nearly 28,000 people for up to 30 years and found those eating 50+ grams daily of high-fat cheese (more than 20% fat) had a 13% lower dementia risk compared to light consumers

* Not all dairy showed benefits — milk, yogurt, low-fat cheese, and low-fat cream had no clear link to dementia risk, while butter showed mixed results depending on overall diet quality

* Vascular dementia saw the biggest drop — people eating the most high-fat cheese had a 29% lower risk of this dementia type caused by reduced blood flow to the brain Genetics mattered — the protective effect of high-fat cheese on Alzheimer’s disease appeared only in people without the APOE e4 gene variant, a major genetic risk factor

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For decades, dietary guidelines have warned against high-fat cheese because of concerns about saturated fat and heart health. Now, a Swedish study that followed 27,670 people for nearly 30 years has uncovered a surprising benefit associated with fatty cheeses. Those who ate more high-fat cheese showed lower rates of dementia.

The research found that participants consuming at least 50 grams daily of cheese with more than 20% fat content had a 13% lower risk of developing dementia compared to those eating less than 15 grams daily. Compared with non-consumers, those eating 20 grams or more per day of high-fat cream showed a 16% lower dementia risk.

Not all dairy products showed these associations. Milk, fermented milk products (like yogurt), low-fat cheese, and low-fat cream showed no clear links to dementia risk overall. Butter was more complicated. In one analysis, higher butter intake was linked to higher Alzheimer’s risk. When it comes to brain health, the type and fat content of dairy products may matter more than simply eating “more dairy” or “less dairy.”

30-Year Study Tracked Nearly 28,000 People

Researchers used data from the Malmö Diet and Cancer cohort, where participants underwent detailed dietary assessments between 1991 and 1996. The evaluation combined three methods: a seven-day food diary, a 168-item food frequency questionnaire, and a 45-60 minute dietary interview conducted by trained personnel.

The study, published in Neurology, identified 3,208 dementia cases through Swedish health registries by December 2020. Cases diagnosed through 2014 underwent additional validation by trained physicians who reviewed symptoms, cognitive test results, brain imaging, and biomarkers when available. The validated cases included 1,126 with Alzheimer’s disease and 451 with vascular dementia.

Participants were followed from their baseline examination until dementia diagnosis, death, emigration, or December 2020 (whichever came first). The median follow-up period was about 25 years.

Genetics May Influence Cheese’s Brain Benefits

Among people without the APOE e4 gene variant, a major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease, eating more high-fat cheese was associated with a 13% lower risk of Alzheimer’s specifically. The gene variant had no effect on the cheese-dementia association overall, but it modified the relationship with Alzheimer’s disease itself.

About 30% of study participants carried at least one copy of the APOE e4 variant.

People who consumed the most high-fat cheese tended to be younger, have lower body mass indexes, and have higher education levels. They also had lower rates of diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and stroke. They were less likely to use cholesterol-lowering medications. However, they were more likely to be current or past smokers and had higher alcohol consumption.

The researchers adjusted their analyses for age, sex, education level, physical activity, smoking status, alcohol consumption, family history of cardiovascular disease, marital status, living alone, diet quality, body mass index, and hypertension. Even after accounting for all these factors, the protective associations with high-fat cheese and cream remained.

Strongest Protection Against Vascular Dementia

High-fat cheese consumption showed particularly strong protective effects against vascular dementia, the second most common form of dementia caused by reduced blood flow to the brain. People eating 50 grams or more daily had a 29% lower risk of vascular dementia compared to those consuming less than 15 grams daily.

High-fat cream consumption also showed inverse associations with both Alzheimer’s disease and vascular dementia when researchers analyzed intake as a continuous variable rather than categories.

The researchers used specific thresholds to categorize dairy products. High-fat cheese meant more than 20% fat, high-fat cream meant more than 30% fat, and high-fat milk and fermented milk meant more than 2.5% fat.

How Researchers Tried to Reduce ‘Reverse Causation’

A major concern in dementia research is reverse causation (the possibility that early cognitive decline changes eating habits years before diagnosis occurs). Dementia can have a long preclinical phase during which subtle brain changes begin but symptoms haven’t appeared yet.

The researchers addressed this by excluding dementia cases that occurred within the first 10 years of follow-up. Surprisingly, this strengthened the protective associations with high-fat cheese, suggesting the findings aren’t simply due to sick people changing their diets before diagnosis.

The study also examined people who reported no substantial diet changes during a five-year follow-up examination. Among this subset, the associations weakened and no longer reached statistical significance, though they remained in the protective direction.

Why High-Fat Cheese May Benefit Brain Health

Cheese is a whole food with protein, calcium, and other compounds packaged together in a way that may affect how the body responds to it. Previous randomized controlled trials have shown that regular-fat cheese doesn’t cause the adverse changes in blood cholesterol that researchers once feared when they issued blanket warnings about saturated fat.

Some animal studies suggest that regular-fat cheese may provide metabolic benefits by altering gut bacteria and altering fat absorption. Regular-fat cheese has been linked to increased fecal fat excretion, meaning the body may absorb less of the fat consumed. The cheese-making process and fermentation may also create beneficial compounds not found in milk.

Mendelian randomization studies, which use genetic variants to infer causal relationships, have linked cheese consumption to lower risks of diabetes and high blood pressure (both risk factors for dementia).

An unmeasured factor would need to substantially increase dementia risk to completely explain away the observed protective association with high-fat cheese. That threshold exceeds the effect sizes of several established dementia risk factors like smoking, high blood pressure, and diabetes.

Butter consumption showed a different pattern. Among people consuming 40 grams or more daily, there was a 27% higher risk of Alzheimer’s disease compared to non-consumers. However, among participants with higher overall diet quality, butter consumption was inversely associated with dementia risk. The authors stress this finding is speculative and might relate to overall dietary fat intake (butter might be protective in an otherwise low-fat diet, but increases risk when added to a diet already high in fat).

Low-fat milk consumption showed an unexpected finding. People consuming 500 grams or more daily (about two cups) had a 24% higher risk of dementia when follow-up ended in 2014. However, this association wasn’t significant when the follow-up was extended to 2020, despite increased statistical power from more cases.

Neither high-fat nor low-fat fermented milk products showed associations with dementia risk in the overall analysis. Regular milk, regardless of fat content, showed no significant associations with dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, or vascular dementia.

The researchers conducted substitution analyses to estimate what might happen if people replaced 20 grams of high-fat cheese with equivalent amounts of other foods. Replacing high-fat cheese with milk, fermented milk, high-fat red meat, or processed meat was associated with increased dementia risk.

The study’s strengths include its population-based design, validation of dementia diagnoses, exceptionally long follow-up period, low loss-to-follow-up rate, and the use of a seven-day food diary alongside questionnaires. However, diet was assessed only at baseline. The study lacked detailed information about specific cheese types beyond fat content. As an observational study, it cannot prove that eating more high-fat cheese directly prevents dementia.

[more at link...]


TOPICS: Agriculture; Cheese, Moose, Sister; Food; Health/Medicine
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To: Red Badger
Must be the cheese bacteria v. the ones in yogurt or everyday milk...which are both quite 'processed' before they get to your table, unless you milk and/or make your own.

Still dreaming of a Mini Jersey! Beau still says, 'NO!' Scrooge! ;)


21 posted on 12/24/2025 6:15:27 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Red Badger

22 posted on 12/24/2025 6:18:28 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: Red Badger

I can dig it. Love cheese, but hate milk and yogurt.


23 posted on 12/24/2025 6:22:13 AM PST by MayflowerMadam ( "Trouble knocked at the door, but, hearing laughter, hurried away". - B. Franklin)
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To: Twotone

23% of our cholesterol is in the brain insulating neurons delivering electrical impulses. What happens to your house wiring when you start stripping off the insulation? Nothing good.


24 posted on 12/24/2025 6:25:45 AM PST by BipolarBob (These violent delights have violent ends.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Keep checking the barn..............


25 posted on 12/24/2025 6:32:34 AM PST by Red Badger (Iryna Zarutska, May 22, 2002 Kyiv, Ukraine – August 22, 2025 Charlotte, North Carolina Say her name)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
He’s holding out for the Scottish Highlands drinking companion cow.


26 posted on 12/24/2025 6:43:36 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

What’s funny about this situation is that Beau DOESN’T drink - anything BUT milk, LOL!

Friends have a half-dozen or so of the Highlands. They are gorgeous critters. :)


27 posted on 12/24/2025 6:54:14 AM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have, 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust Post-Apocalyptic skill set.)
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To: bert

Your friend needs to take vitamin C


28 posted on 12/24/2025 6:57:58 AM PST by goodnesswins (Make educ institutions return to the Mission...reading, writing, math...not Opinions & propaganda)
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To: bert

Have a slice of swiss on a hot bacon egg and ham sandwhich every morning. Will have to buy some high fat cheese i guess to go along with it.


29 posted on 12/24/2025 7:10:48 AM PST by Bob434 (Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana)
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To: bert

True, but we’re living longer than ever (mostly due to modern medicine though). My sandwhich is made with Keto bread with seeds. Not sure if it’s real brezd or not, but meh, 80-90 is long 3nough for me.


30 posted on 12/24/2025 7:12:31 AM PST by Bob434 (Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana)
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To: Red Badger

Correlation is not cause. Let’s have some proof of how this allegedly works.


31 posted on 12/24/2025 7:46:48 AM PST by I want the USA back (America is once again GREAT! Blue Lives Matter! White lives matter. )
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To: TheThirdRuffian
"Da Brie was everywhere!

LOL, that's no gouda.

32 posted on 12/24/2025 7:46:54 AM PST by DannyTN
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To: Red Badger

Great!

I’ll be making up an hors d’oeuvres tray for relatives for later today (Christmas Eve!) - and will make cheese the featured item.

I can now tell everyone to eat up! - that high fat cheese prevents dementia.


33 posted on 12/24/2025 7:58:02 AM PST by Bon of Babble (You Say You Want a Revolution?)
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To: Bob434

I’m trying to find a bread I really like. I ate the bread with all the seeds but got tired of it. I would like to eat the crusty bread with lots of internal holes but buying it is not convenient. My efforts to make it are failure.

I eat all kinds of cheese but am partial to Swiss. My family actually came to East Tennessee from Switzerland and were in fact cheese makers for a business.

From GROK

“Swiss cheese typically contains about 31 grams of total fat per 100 grams, according to USDA nutrition data. This breaks down to roughly:Total fat: 31g (about 31–32% by weight)
Saturated fat: 18g
Of the calories (around 393 per 100g), approximately 70–71% come from fat.”

So, you are good. Swiss is >20% fat and will keep you on the ball.


34 posted on 12/24/2025 8:09:24 AM PST by bert ( (KE. NP. +12) Quid Quid Nominatur Fabricatur)
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To: Red Badger

Turns women’s diets are not healthy.


35 posted on 12/24/2025 8:11:39 AM PST by bray (It's not racist to be racist against races the DNC hates.)
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To: ProtectOurFreedom

None, the high fat diet does not add to heart diseaase as they are fining now.


36 posted on 12/24/2025 8:14:01 AM PST by bray (It's not racist to be racist against races the DNC hates.)
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To: Red Badger

There is, therefore, a concern that statins (cholesterol-lowering drugs) contribute to dementia


37 posted on 12/24/2025 9:07:33 AM PST by PGR88
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

We were hiking in the hills and mountains west of Edinburgh in late August and found a herd of them. Such cool cows!


38 posted on 12/24/2025 9:10:25 AM PST by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: ProtectOurFreedom
How many dropped dead of heart attack?

Depends. The fats, proteins and enzymes in aged cheddar are your friend. The processed crap in cheezwhiz, not so much.

Your life is better with cheddar.

39 posted on 12/24/2025 9:16:16 AM PST by Sirius Lee ("Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference.)
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To: FamiliarFace

My mom has it and is a home at 85.

Her issue was she had/has high BP and literally never took her BP meds.

I keep my BP at 110/70, which is fine except when I stand up after a full meal, lol.


40 posted on 12/24/2025 9:45:01 AM PST by TheThirdRuffian (Orange is the new brown)
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