A medical doctor who's treated 40 years of plant-based patients just shared research that challenges everything you thought you knew about veganism.
What if the diet you chose to live longer is actually setting you up for dementia?
Dr. Joel Fuhrman has spent over four decades in medical practice watching his patients thrive on plant-based diets. Lower cancer rates. Stronger hearts. Better cholesterol numbers. The kind of health markers that make you think you've cracked the longevity code.
But something else was happening in his examination rooms.
Watch
Listen
Among elderly vegans from around the world who sought him out—people committed enough to their plant-based diet to travel and find a doctor who supported it—he noticed a pattern he couldn't ignore. Dementia. Parkinson's. Strokes. Neurological diseases ravaging the very population that should have been protected by all those antioxidants and phytochemicals.
"I've been taking care of the vegan and plant-based community for more than 35 years," Dr. Fuhrman explains. "And I noted an increased amount of neurologic disease in later years and elderly vegans."
Now, research is validating what he's been warning about for years. And the findings are forcing a reckoning in the plant-based community.
The Study That Vegan Advocates Don't Want to Talk About
In October 2024, researchers updated the Seventh Day Adventist Health Study Two—arguably the most rigorous nutrition study ever conducted. This isn't a small survey with questionable methodology. It tracked 88,000 people over decades. It recorded 12,000 deaths. It examined what people actually died from.
And the results about vegan diets were jarring.
Compared to non-vegans in the same health-conscious population, vegans 85 and older showed:
17% increased risk of stroke
13% increased risk of dementia
37% increased risk of Parkinson's disease1
Let that sink in. A 37% increased risk of Parkinson's—a disease that destroys your ability to walk, move, think clearly, and enjoy life.
But here's what makes this study so powerful—and why you should trust it more than other nutrition research you've heard.
Why This Study Matters More Than Everything Else You've Read
Most nutrition studies compare healthy vegans to typical Americans eating a standard diet. That's not a fair comparison. Of course the vegan wins.
This study compares healthy vegans to other healthy people. The Seventh Day Adventists don't smoke. They don't drink alcohol. They exercise. They eat real food. It's a Blue Zone—one of the world's healthiest populations.
When you compare vegan Adventists to non-vegan Adventists, you're isolating the effect of diet itself, stripped of all the confounding factors that muddy most nutrition research.
As Dr. Fuhrman notes: "The Seventh-Day Adventist Health Study two is such an important study in the history of nutritional science because it has less confounding variables."
Translation: This isn't noise. This is signal.
And the signal is clear: a strict vegan diet, even when done healthfully with abundant plants, creates specific nutritional vulnerabilities that increase neurological disease risk in later life.
The Brain Paradox: Why Your Antioxidants Can't Protect You
This is where the research gets uncomfortable for vegan advocates.
You've been eating all those antioxidants. All those phytochemicals. All those polyphenols. Fruits. Vegetables. Leafy greens. Your body is drowning in the compounds nutritionists say protect the brain.
So why does the research show vegans getting more dementia and Parkinson's?
The answer: DHA.
Dr. Cara Fuhrman, a naturopathic doctor and researcher, explains the mechanism plainly: "In vegans specifically, we're not eating enough DHA, and without DHA, your brain can't filter these toxins out, which is leading to the increase in Parkinson's disease."
DHA is a long-chain omega-3 fatty acid. It's critical for brain function. But more importantly for this discussion, it's essential for your brain's detoxification system.
Think about what your brain is exposed to in the modern world:
Paraquat: An herbicide banned in China and the EU but still sprayed on American crops under "strict guidelines"2
Dry cleaning chemicals (TCE): Directly linked to Parkinson's disease3
Pesticides: People living near golf courses have a 125% increased risk of Parkinson's from the weed killers used there4
Microplastics: The average American now has measurable plastic compounds in their blood5
Industrial pollutants: Things our ancestors never breathed6
Your brain has a detoxification system. It can filter out these compounds. But it needs DHA to do it effectively.7
Without adequate DHA levels, these toxins accumulate in brain tissue. Day after day. Month after month. Year after year. Decade after decade.
By the time you're 80 and noticing tremors in your hands or memory problems, it's too late. The damage was done when you were 50. Or 40. Maybe earlier.
The Conversion Problem Nobody Talks About
You've probably heard that you can get DHA from flaxseeds, chia seeds, or walnuts. Your body can theoretically convert ALA (found in these plants) into DHA.
Here's what the research actually shows: only about 10% of people can convert enough ALA to meet their body's needs.8
For the other 90% of us, we're trying to fill a swimming pool with a garden hose.
Dr. Cara explains the timeline: "What the research shows is that flax and chia is high in ALA, which can increase your levels of EPA, but it doesn't increase your levels of DHA. That would take years and years and years."
And you don't have years and years and years. You need protection now.
The Longevity Numbers Are Shocking
In 2021, researchers published a study measuring omega-3 index levels in people's blood and tracking who lived longer.
People with an omega-3 index greater than 8% lived about five years longer than those with an index below 4%.
Five years doesn't sound like much until you realize: that's statistically equivalent to the longevity difference between smokers and non-smokers.9
This isn't marginal. This is massive.
More recent research from 2024 analyzed every clinical trial on omega-3 supplementation and dementia prevention. Scientists from around the world spent years compiling data. Their conclusion: people with higher omega-3 intake and higher red blood cell DHA and EPA have lower risk of cognitive decline.10
Not taking omega-3s after you develop dementia symptoms. Maintaining optimal levels for decades so you never develop dementia in the first place.
5 Ways Your Vegan Diet Is Setting You Up for Neurological Disease
1. Your Brain Can't Detoxify Modern Poisons Without DHA
Environmental toxins accumulate in brain tissue. DHA enables your brain to filter these out. Vegans typically lack adequate DHA. Result: toxin buildup leading to Parkinson's and other neurological diseases.
2. You're Probably Eating Far Too Much Salt
Vegan restaurants compensate for the absence of meat by loading dishes with sodium. It tastes good. Your taste buds adapt. You don't notice it. But decades of excess sodium damages blood vessel linings and increases arterial stiffness.11 This is why vegans in the study had increased hemorrhagic stroke risk.
3. Your Brain Is Literally Shrinking
Research shows that people with low DHA levels experience accelerated brain volume loss with aging.12-19 This shrinkage is associated with cognitive decline and dementia. DHA is critical for maintaining brain structure over decades.
4. You're Missing Three Critical Nutrients That Are Hard to Get on a Vegan Diet
Most vegans know about B12. Many supplement it. But the other two—DHA and zinc—are frequently neglected. Without all three, your body is running on incomplete fuel.
5. You Started Thinking About This Too Late
Here's the cruelest part: research shows that starting DHA supplementation after neurological symptoms appear has limited benefit.20 You needed decades of adequate DHA. If you're over 50 and just learning about this, you're already behind. The damage was set in motion years ago.
The Salt Trap: Why Vegans Are Uniquely Vulnerable to Stroke
Here's a counterintuitive truth that might save your life:
A diet high in cholesterol and saturated fat—the kind that causes heart attacks—might actually protect your brain from stroke.
This sounds completely backwards. But the mechanism is fascinating and important to understand.21
When you eat a lot of cholesterol and saturated fat, plaque builds up inside your blood vessels. This plaque is terrible for your heart. But plaque also provides structural support for fragile blood vessels in your brain, protecting them from rupturing.
Vegans, with clean arteries and minimal plaque buildup, have fragile, unprotected blood vessels.
Now introduce excess salt—something vegan restaurants routinely do to compensate for lack of meat flavor.
Excess sodium damages the interior lining of blood vessels, causing inflammation and accelerating aging. It increases blood pressure making vessels prone to rupture.
Vegans are uniquely vulnerable.
This is why the study found vegans had increased hemorrhagic stroke risk (bleeding in the brain), not ischemic stroke (clots from plaque). It's the opposite problem, but equally dangerous.
Dr. Fuhrman calls this cumulative exposure "sodium years"—a concept borrowed from "pack years" used to measure smoking damage.
If you've been eating high-salt vegan restaurant food for 30 years, your sodium years are accumulating. Your blood vessels are aging faster. Your stroke risk is climbing.
And salt does more than just damage blood vessel linings. It reduces nitric oxide production, which impairs blood flow and nutrient delivery throughout your entire body.
Think about that: you're eating a nutrient-dense plant diet specifically to maximize nutrient absorption, and then you're sabotaging that entire effort by consuming excess salt.
What Dr. Fuhrman Actually Recommends (It's Not Veganism)
Dr. Fuhrman doesn't recommend a vegan diet. He never has.
He recommends what he calls a Nutritarian diet—a plant-rich diet that minimizes or eliminates animal products but includes strategic supplementation to fill the nutritional gaps that a strict vegan diet creates.
"The recommendation is in today's society, we're encouraging people to follow a plant-rich diet and then supplement intelligently to take in those few nutrients that the plant-based diet doesn't have," he explains. "Which is particularly DHA, EPA, zinc and B12."
Note: he says DHA and EPA first. Those are the omega-3s vegans almost universally lack.
This approach explains why he's been ahead of the research for decades. He wasn't pushing veganism while secretly hoping his patients would figure out the gaps. He was recommending a different approach altogether—one that combines the protective benefits of plant-based eating with the nutritional completeness that smart supplementation provides.
The Supplement Protocol: What Dr. Fuhrman Now Recommends
For anyone following a plant-rich diet (whether strictly vegan or not), the nutritional gaps require attention:
DHA/EPA (Omega-3 Fatty Acids)
Use algae-based DHA, not fish or fish oil
Keep refrigerated in dark glass to prevent oxidation
Target omega-3 index: 6-9% (get tested to know your actual level). This is non-negotiable for brain health
Often overlooked but critical for immune function and neurological health
Plant-based sources have lower bioavailability
Supplementation is likely necessary
Critical point: Don't guess at dosages. Get tested. A simple blood test for omega-3 index costs $40-80 and tells you exactly what you need. A 2024 review of clinical trials concluded that personalizing supplementation based on your individual needs produces the best protection against dementia.22
Before You Go Vegan (Or Stay Vegan), Read This
The research is clear: a well-planned plant-based diet outperforms a typical omnivore diet for longevity and disease prevention.
A study featured on Netflix compared 22 sets of identical twins. One twin ate a healthy omnivore diet. One ate a healthy vegan diet. Both eating whole foods, not processed junk.23
The vegan twin had better health markers.
The plant-based approach works. The issue isn't plants—it's nutritional completeness.
But here's what the new research makes clear: you can't just eat plants and hope for the best. You need:
Sufficient DHA (which vegans almost always lack)
Awareness of salt intake (which vegan packaged and restaurant foods make easy to exceed)
Strategic supplementation or small amounts of animal products to fill nutrient gaps
Testing to verify you're in the optimal range, not just "adequate"
In other words: eat plants abundantly, but don't pretend plants alone are nutritionally complete.
Three Tests You Should Get (If You're Vegan or Plant-Based)
1. Omega-3 Index Blood Test Measures the percentage of omega-3 fatty acids in your red blood cells. You want 6-9. Most vegans without supplementation score below 4. Cost: $40-80
2. B12 and Methylmalonic Acid Test B12 deficiency is common in plant-based eaters and can cause neurological damage before symptoms appear. Catch it early. Cost: $30-60
The Bottom Line: This Is About Eating Intelligently, Not Eating Ideologically
Dr. Fuhrman's position is nuanced and evidence-based: Don't follow a vegan diet blindly. Follow a plant-rich diet intelligently.
Eat an abundance of plants. Minimize processed foods. But also:
Supplement strategically with nutrients plants can't reliably provide
Get tested to know your actual levels, not guess
Limit added sodium intake
Think decades ahead about what your brain needs to function at 80 or 90
Most importantly: recognize that ideological purity and nutritional completeness aren't the same thing.
You can believe in plant-based eating and still acknowledge that strict veganism creates specific nutritional gaps. Acknowledging those gaps and addressing them isn't a betrayal of plant-based principles. It's the responsible way to eat plants for longevity.
The neurological diseases that emerge in your 80s are being set in motion now—at 50, 60, or whenever you read this. Your decisions today about DHA, salt, and nutritional completeness will determine whether you have a sharp mind or declining cognition in your later years.
This isn't about living longer. It's about living better in those longer years—with your memory intact, your hands steady, your mind clear.
Your 90-year-old self is watching what you do today. Make it worth their while.
Get Tested Today
Don't wait for symptoms. Don't wait for memory problems. Don't wait for tremors.
Get your omega-3 index tested. Get your B12 levels checked. Know your actual numbers, not your assumptions.
✓ The 2024 Seventh Day Adventist study showed older vegans had 37% higher Parkinson's risk, 13% higher dementia risk, 17% higher stroke risk
✓ DHA deficiency is the likely culprit—your brain can't detoxify modern toxins without it
✓ Only 10% of vegans can convert enough ALA to DHA; the rest need supplementation or animal products
✓ Maintaining an optimal omega-3 index for decades provides dementia protection equivalent to not smoking
✓ Vegans are uniquely vulnerable to salt damage and hemorrhagic stroke
✓ Dr. Fuhrman recommends a plant-rich diet with strategic animal products, not strict veganism
✓ Four supplements/nutrients matter: DHA (non-negotiable), EPA, B12, and zinc
✓ Get tested before guessing at dosages—personalized supplementation works best
✓ A plant-rich diet still outperforms typical diets—but only if done nutritionally complete
References
Abris GP, Shavlik DJ, Mathew RO, et al. Cause-specific and all-cause mortalities in vegetarian compared with those in nonvegetarian participants from the Adventist Health Study-2 cohort. Am J Clin Nutr 2024.
Dorsey ER, Zafar M, Lettenberger SE, et al. Trichloroethylene: An Invisible Cause of Parkinson's Disease? J Parkinsons Dis. 2023;13(2):203-218.
Krzyzanowski B, Mullan AF, Dorsey ER, et al. Proximity to Golf Courses and Risk of Parkinson Disease. JAMA Netw Open. 2025 May 1;8(5):e259198.
Roslan NS, Lee YY, Ibrahim YS, et al. Detection of microplastics in human tissues and organs: A scoping review. J Glob Health 2024, 14:04179.
Xie C, Xia X, Wang K, et al. Ambient Air Pollution and Parkinson's Disease and Alzheimer's Disease: An Updated Meta-Analysis. Toxics. 2025 Feb 15;13(2):139.
Heshmati J, Morvaridzadeh M, Maroufizadeh S, et al. Omega-3 fatty acids supplementation and oxidative stress parameters: A systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials. Pharmacol Res 2019, 149:104462.
Sarter B, Kelsey KS, Schwartz TA, Harris WS. Blood docosahexaenoic acid and eicosapentaenoic acid in vegans: Associations with age and gender and effects of an algal-derived omega-3 fatty acid supplement. Clin Nutr 2014.
McBurney MI, Tintle NL, Vasan RS, et al. Using an erythrocyte fatty acid fingerprint to predict risk of all-cause mortality: the Framingham Offspring Cohort. Am J Clin Nutr 2021.
Wei BZ, Li L, Dong CW, et al. The Relationship of Omega-3 Fatty Acids with Dementia and Cognitive Decline: Evidence from Perspective Cohort Studies of Supplementation, Dietary Intake, and Blood Markers. Am J Clin Nutr 2023.
He FJ, Tan M, Ma Y, MacGregor GA. Salt Reduction to Prevent Hypertension and Cardiovascular Disease: JACC State-of-the-Art Review. J Am Coll Cardiol 2020, 75:632-647.
Bowman GL, Dodge HH, Mattek N, et al. Plasma omega-3 PUFA and white matter mediated executive decline in older adults. Front Aging Neurosci 2013, 5:92.
Tan ZS, Harris WS, Beiser AS, et al. Red blood cell omega-3 fatty acid levels and markers of accelerated brain aging. Neurology 2012, 78:658-664.
Pottala JV, Yaffe K, Robinson JG, et al. Higher RBC EPA + DHA corresponds with larger total brain and hippocampal volumes: WHIMS-MRI study. Neurology 2014, 82:435-442.
Thomas A, Baillet M, Proust-Lima C, et al. Blood polyunsaturated omega-3 fatty acids, brain atrophy, cognitive decline, and dementia risk. Alzheimers Dement 2020.
Rouch L, Virecoulon Giudici K, Cantet C, et al. Associations of erythrocyte omega-3 fatty acids with cognition, brain imaging and biomarkers in the Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging initiative: cross-sectional and longitudinal retrospective analyses. Am J Clin Nutr 2022, 116:1492-1506.
Loong S, Barnes S, Gatto NM, et al. Omega-3 Fatty Acids, Cognition, and Brain Volume in Older Adults. Brain Sci 2023, 13.
Satizabal CL, Himali JJ, Beiser AS, et al. Association of Red Blood Cell Omega-3 Fatty Acids With MRI Markers and Cognitive Function in Midlife: The Framingham Heart Study. Neurology 2022:10.1212/WNL.0000000000201296.
Virtanen JK, Siscovick DS, Lemaitre RN, et al. Circulating Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Subclinical Brain Abnormalities on MRI in Older Adults: The Cardiovascular Health Study. Journal of the American Heart Association 2013, 2:e000305.
Canhada S, Castro K, Perry IS, Luft VC. Omega-3 fatty acids' supplementation in Alzheimer's disease: A systematic review. Nutr Neurosci 2018, 21:529-538.
Wang X, Dong Y, Qi X, et al. Cholesterol levels and risk of hemorrhagic stroke: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Stroke 2013, 44:1833-1839.
Castellanos-Perilla N, Borda MG, Aarsland D, Barreto GE. An analysis of omega-3 clinical trials and a call for personalized supplementation for dementia prevention. Expert Rev Neurother 2024, 24:313-324.
Dwaraka VB, Aronica L, Carreras-Gallo N, et al. Unveiling the epigenetic impact of vegan vs. omnivorous diets on aging: insights from the Twins Nutrition Study (TwiNS). BMC Med 2024, 22:301.
Why Your Vegan Diet Might Be Slowly Shrinking Your Brain
June 18, 2026 by Dr. Fuhrman Staff
A medical doctor who's treated 40 years of plant-based patients just shared research that challenges everything you thought you knew about veganism.
What if the diet you chose to live longer is actually setting you up for dementia?
Dr. Joel Fuhrman has spent over four decades in medical practice watching his patients thrive on plant-based diets. Lower cancer rates. Stronger hearts. Better cholesterol numbers. The kind of health markers that make you think you've cracked the longevity code.
But something else was happening in his examination rooms.
Watch
Listen
Among elderly vegans from around the world who sought him out—people committed enough to their plant-based diet to travel and find a doctor who supported it—he noticed a pattern he couldn't ignore. Dementia. Parkinson's. Strokes. Neurological diseases ravaging the very population that should have been protected by all those antioxidants and phytochemicals.
"I've been taking care of the vegan and plant-based community for more than 35 years," Dr. Fuhrman explains. "And I noted an increased amount of neurologic disease in later years and elderly vegans."
Now, research is validating what he's been warning about for years. And the findings are forcing a reckoning in the plant-based community.
The Study That Vegan Advocates Don't Want to Talk About
In October 2024, researchers updated the Seventh Day Adventist Health Study Two—arguably the most rigorous nutrition study ever conducted. This isn't a small survey with questionable methodology. It tracked 88,000 people over decades. It recorded 12,000 deaths. It examined what people actually died from.
And the results about vegan diets were jarring.
Compared to non-vegans in the same health-conscious population, vegans 85 and older showed:
Let that sink in. A 37% increased risk of Parkinson's—a disease that destroys your ability to walk, move, think clearly, and enjoy life.
But here's what makes this study so powerful—and why you should trust it more than other nutrition research you've heard.
Why This Study Matters More Than Everything Else You've Read
Most nutrition studies compare healthy vegans to typical Americans eating a standard diet. That's not a fair comparison. Of course the vegan wins.
This study compares healthy vegans to other healthy people. The Seventh Day Adventists don't smoke. They don't drink alcohol. They exercise. They eat real food. It's a Blue Zone—one of the world's healthiest populations.
When you compare vegan Adventists to non-vegan Adventists, you're isolating the effect of diet itself, stripped of all the confounding factors that muddy most nutrition research.
As Dr. Fuhrman notes: "The Seventh-Day Adventist Health Study two is such an important study in the history of nutritional science because it has less confounding variables."
Translation: This isn't noise. This is signal.
And the signal is clear: a strict vegan diet, even when done healthfully with abundant plants, creates specific nutritional vulnerabilities that increase neurological disease risk in later life.
The Brain Paradox: Why Your Antioxidants Can't Protect You
This is where the research gets uncomfortable for vegan advocates.
You've been eating all those antioxidants. All those phytochemicals. All those polyphenols. Fruits. Vegetables. Leafy greens. Your body is drowning in the compounds nutritionists say protect the brain.
So why does the research show vegans getting more dementia and Parkinson's?
The answer: DHA.
Dr. Cara Fuhrman, a naturopathic doctor and researcher, explains the mechanism plainly: "In vegans specifically, we're not eating enough DHA, and without DHA, your brain can't filter these toxins out, which is leading to the increase in Parkinson's disease."
DHA is a long-chain omega-3 fatty acid. It's critical for brain function. But more importantly for this discussion, it's essential for your brain's detoxification system.
Think about what your brain is exposed to in the modern world:
Your brain has a detoxification system. It can filter out these compounds. But it needs DHA to do it effectively.7
Without adequate DHA levels, these toxins accumulate in brain tissue. Day after day. Month after month. Year after year. Decade after decade.
By the time you're 80 and noticing tremors in your hands or memory problems, it's too late. The damage was done when you were 50. Or 40. Maybe earlier.
The Conversion Problem Nobody Talks About
You've probably heard that you can get DHA from flaxseeds, chia seeds, or walnuts. Your body can theoretically convert ALA (found in these plants) into DHA.
Here's what the research actually shows: only about 10% of people can convert enough ALA to meet their body's needs.8
For the other 90% of us, we're trying to fill a swimming pool with a garden hose.
Dr. Cara explains the timeline: "What the research shows is that flax and chia is high in ALA, which can increase your levels of EPA, but it doesn't increase your levels of DHA. That would take years and years and years."
And you don't have years and years and years. You need protection now.
The Longevity Numbers Are Shocking
In 2021, researchers published a study measuring omega-3 index levels in people's blood and tracking who lived longer.
People with an omega-3 index greater than 8% lived about five years longer than those with an index below 4%.
Five years doesn't sound like much until you realize: that's statistically equivalent to the longevity difference between smokers and non-smokers.9
This isn't marginal. This is massive.
More recent research from 2024 analyzed every clinical trial on omega-3 supplementation and dementia prevention. Scientists from around the world spent years compiling data. Their conclusion: people with higher omega-3 intake and higher red blood cell DHA and EPA have lower risk of cognitive decline.10
Not taking omega-3s after you develop dementia symptoms. Maintaining optimal levels for decades so you never develop dementia in the first place.
5 Ways Your Vegan Diet Is Setting You Up for Neurological Disease
1. Your Brain Can't Detoxify Modern Poisons Without DHA
Environmental toxins accumulate in brain tissue. DHA enables your brain to filter these out. Vegans typically lack adequate DHA. Result: toxin buildup leading to Parkinson's and other neurological diseases.
2. You're Probably Eating Far Too Much Salt
Vegan restaurants compensate for the absence of meat by loading dishes with sodium. It tastes good. Your taste buds adapt. You don't notice it. But decades of excess sodium damages blood vessel linings and increases arterial stiffness.11 This is why vegans in the study had increased hemorrhagic stroke risk.
3. Your Brain Is Literally Shrinking
Research shows that people with low DHA levels experience accelerated brain volume loss with aging.12-19 This shrinkage is associated with cognitive decline and dementia. DHA is critical for maintaining brain structure over decades.
4. You're Missing Three Critical Nutrients That Are Hard to Get on a Vegan Diet
Most vegans know about B12. Many supplement it. But the other two—DHA and zinc—are frequently neglected. Without all three, your body is running on incomplete fuel.
5. You Started Thinking About This Too Late
Here's the cruelest part: research shows that starting DHA supplementation after neurological symptoms appear has limited benefit.20 You needed decades of adequate DHA. If you're over 50 and just learning about this, you're already behind. The damage was set in motion years ago.
The Salt Trap: Why Vegans Are Uniquely Vulnerable to Stroke
Here's a counterintuitive truth that might save your life:
A diet high in cholesterol and saturated fat—the kind that causes heart attacks—might actually protect your brain from stroke.
This sounds completely backwards. But the mechanism is fascinating and important to understand.21
When you eat a lot of cholesterol and saturated fat, plaque builds up inside your blood vessels. This plaque is terrible for your heart. But plaque also provides structural support for fragile blood vessels in your brain, protecting them from rupturing.
Vegans, with clean arteries and minimal plaque buildup, have fragile, unprotected blood vessels.
Now introduce excess salt—something vegan restaurants routinely do to compensate for lack of meat flavor.
Excess sodium damages the interior lining of blood vessels, causing inflammation and accelerating aging. It increases blood pressure making vessels prone to rupture.
Vegans are uniquely vulnerable.
This is why the study found vegans had increased hemorrhagic stroke risk (bleeding in the brain), not ischemic stroke (clots from plaque). It's the opposite problem, but equally dangerous.
Dr. Fuhrman calls this cumulative exposure "sodium years"—a concept borrowed from "pack years" used to measure smoking damage.
If you've been eating high-salt vegan restaurant food for 30 years, your sodium years are accumulating. Your blood vessels are aging faster. Your stroke risk is climbing.
And salt does more than just damage blood vessel linings. It reduces nitric oxide production, which impairs blood flow and nutrient delivery throughout your entire body.
Think about that: you're eating a nutrient-dense plant diet specifically to maximize nutrient absorption, and then you're sabotaging that entire effort by consuming excess salt.
What Dr. Fuhrman Actually Recommends (It's Not Veganism)
Dr. Fuhrman doesn't recommend a vegan diet. He never has.
He recommends what he calls a Nutritarian diet—a plant-rich diet that minimizes or eliminates animal products but includes strategic supplementation to fill the nutritional gaps that a strict vegan diet creates.
"The recommendation is in today's society, we're encouraging people to follow a plant-rich diet and then supplement intelligently to take in those few nutrients that the plant-based diet doesn't have," he explains. "Which is particularly DHA, EPA, zinc and B12."
Note: he says DHA and EPA first. Those are the omega-3s vegans almost universally lack.
This approach explains why he's been ahead of the research for decades. He wasn't pushing veganism while secretly hoping his patients would figure out the gaps. He was recommending a different approach altogether—one that combines the protective benefits of plant-based eating with the nutritional completeness that smart supplementation provides.
The Supplement Protocol: What Dr. Fuhrman Now Recommends
For anyone following a plant-rich diet (whether strictly vegan or not), the nutritional gaps require attention:
DHA/EPA (Omega-3 Fatty Acids)
B12
Zinc
Critical point: Don't guess at dosages. Get tested. A simple blood test for omega-3 index costs $40-80 and tells you exactly what you need. A 2024 review of clinical trials concluded that personalizing supplementation based on your individual needs produces the best protection against dementia.22
Before You Go Vegan (Or Stay Vegan), Read This
The research is clear: a well-planned plant-based diet outperforms a typical omnivore diet for longevity and disease prevention.
A study featured on Netflix compared 22 sets of identical twins. One twin ate a healthy omnivore diet. One ate a healthy vegan diet. Both eating whole foods, not processed junk.23
The vegan twin had better health markers.
The plant-based approach works. The issue isn't plants—it's nutritional completeness.
But here's what the new research makes clear: you can't just eat plants and hope for the best. You need:
In other words: eat plants abundantly, but don't pretend plants alone are nutritionally complete.
Three Tests You Should Get (If You're Vegan or Plant-Based)
1. Omega-3 Index Blood Test Measures the percentage of omega-3 fatty acids in your red blood cells. You want 6-9. Most vegans without supplementation score below 4. Cost: $40-80
2. B12 and Methylmalonic Acid Test B12 deficiency is common in plant-based eaters and can cause neurological damage before symptoms appear. Catch it early. Cost: $30-60
Related: What blood tests do I need?
The Bottom Line: This Is About Eating Intelligently, Not Eating Ideologically
Dr. Fuhrman's position is nuanced and evidence-based: Don't follow a vegan diet blindly. Follow a plant-rich diet intelligently.
Eat an abundance of plants. Minimize processed foods. But also:
Most importantly: recognize that ideological purity and nutritional completeness aren't the same thing.
You can believe in plant-based eating and still acknowledge that strict veganism creates specific nutritional gaps. Acknowledging those gaps and addressing them isn't a betrayal of plant-based principles. It's the responsible way to eat plants for longevity.
The neurological diseases that emerge in your 80s are being set in motion now—at 50, 60, or whenever you read this. Your decisions today about DHA, salt, and nutritional completeness will determine whether you have a sharp mind or declining cognition in your later years.
This isn't about living longer. It's about living better in those longer years—with your memory intact, your hands steady, your mind clear.
Your 90-year-old self is watching what you do today. Make it worth their while.
Get Tested Today
Don't wait for symptoms. Don't wait for memory problems. Don't wait for tremors.
Get your omega-3 index tested. Get your B12 levels checked. Know your actual numbers, not your assumptions.
Related: What blood tests do I need?
Then supplement accordingly.
Key Takeaways
✓ The 2024 Seventh Day Adventist study showed older vegans had 37% higher Parkinson's risk, 13% higher dementia risk, 17% higher stroke risk
✓ DHA deficiency is the likely culprit—your brain can't detoxify modern toxins without it
✓ Only 10% of vegans can convert enough ALA to DHA; the rest need supplementation or animal products
✓ Maintaining an optimal omega-3 index for decades provides dementia protection equivalent to not smoking
✓ Vegans are uniquely vulnerable to salt damage and hemorrhagic stroke
✓ Dr. Fuhrman recommends a plant-rich diet with strategic animal products, not strict veganism
✓ Four supplements/nutrients matter: DHA (non-negotiable), EPA, B12, and zinc
✓ Get tested before guessing at dosages—personalized supplementation works best
✓ A plant-rich diet still outperforms typical diets—but only if done nutritionally complete