High blood pressure, diabetes, smoking and obesity in middle age may shrink brain, damage thinking

August 1, 2011 in Neuroscience

A new study suggests smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes and being overweight in middle age may cause brain shrinkage and lead to cognitive problems up to a decade later. The study is published in the August 2, 2011, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.

"These factors appeared to cause the brain to lose volume, to develop lesions secondary to presumed vascular injury, and also appeared to affect its ability to plan and make decisions as quickly as 10 years later. A different pattern of association was observed for each of the factors," said study author Charles DeCarli, MD, with the University of California at Davis in Sacramento and a Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology. "Our findings provide evidence that identifying these risk factors early in people of middle age could be useful in screening people for at-risk dementia and encouraging people to make changes to their lifestyle before it's too late."

The study involved 1,352 people without dementia from the Framingham Offspring Study with an average age of 54.

Participants had body mass and waist circumference measures taken and were given blood pressure, cholesterol and diabetes tests. They also underwent brain MRI scans over the span of a decade, the first starting about seven years after the initial risk factor exam. Participants with stroke and dementia at baseline were excluded, and between the first and last MRI exams, 19 people had a stroke and two developed dementia.

The study found that people with developed white matter hyperintensities, or small areas of vascular brain damage, at a faster rate than those with normal readings and had a more rapid worsening of scores on tests of executive function, or planning and decision making, corresponding to five and eight years of chronological aging respectively.

People with diabetes in middle age lost brain volume in the hippocampus (measured indirectly using a surrogate marker) at a faster rate than those without . Smokers lost brain volume overall and in the hippocampus at a faster rate than nonsmokers and were also more likely to have a rapid increase in white matter hyperintensities.

People who were obese at were more likely to be in the top 25 percent of those with the faster rate of decline in scores on tests of executive function, DeCarli said. People with a high waist-to-hip ratio were more likely to be in the top 25 percent of those with faster decrease in their volume.

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Vendicar_Decarian
Aug 01, 2011

Rank: 3.7 / 5 (3)
Finally something that can explain the stupidity of American Tea-Tards.
Mauricio
Aug 02, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
and also explain a lot of general public stupidity.

The government likes people obese, smoking and watching TV, so they can control them better.

God forbid the voters reading and thinking.
FrankHerbert
Aug 02, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (9)
What, no comment from dogbert yet?

Maybe one of these conditions finally caught up with him ;-)
cyberCMDR
Aug 07, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
This correlates well with another study cited on Physorg, that showed that ED was affected by weight gain. Circulatory issues caused by fat/plaque deposits in blood vessels would impact the brain as well as the penis. What struck me was the article said obese people can hear facts about increased health risks and don't react, but take note when it affects their ability to perform. It sounds like the higher cognitive abilities of obese people may tend to be compromised, and it's only when there is a strong emotional component (mid-brain function) involved that they act.
Rank 4 /5 (6 votes)
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