
Psychiatr News December 2, 2005
Volume 40, Number 23, page 42
© 2005 American Psychiatric Association
Dementia Data Give New Reason To Keep Weight Down
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Midlife obesity spells bad news as far as later dementia is concerned,
with new data tying it to increased dementia risk.
Obesity is known to increase the risk for a number of health
consequencesheart disease, stroke, diabetes, gallbladder disease,
osteoarthritis, sleep apnea, and some cancers, for example.
Now it appears to be a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease as well,
according to a study in the October Archives of Neurology headed by
Miia Kivipelto, M.D., Ph.D., of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.
In the 1970s and 1980s, large population-based, random samples of Finns
were surveyed on health status and medical history. Their blood pressure and
cholesterol levels were also measured, and their body mass index calculated.
Then in 1997, Kivipelto and her colleagues invited a random sample of 2,000
Finns who had participated in the earlier surveys to participate in a
follow-up study. Some 1,500 subjects agreed to do so.
These 1,500 subjects had been 51 years old on average during the initial
surveys; they were now 72 years old on average.
In the follow-up study, which took place in 1998, blood from subjects was
drawn to determine which variant of the apolipoprotein E gene they possessed,
since the e4 variant of the gene is a known risk factor for Alzheimer's. They
were also assessed according to DSM-IV criteria for dementia.
Sixty-one of the subjects were found to have dementia, and 48 of them were
found to have Alzheimer's disease.
The researchers then determined if body mass index at midlife had any link
with developing dementia late in life. The answer was yes. Dementia was found
significantly more often in subjects who had been overweight (with a BMI from
25 to 30) or obese (with a BMI of 30 or higher) in midlife than in subjects
who had been of normal weight (with a BMI lower than 25) at that time.
Specifically, while only 3 percent of normal-weight individuals later
developed dementia, 4 percent of overweight individuals and 10 percent of
obese individuals did.
Individuals who had been overweight but not obese in middle age were at no
greater risk of later developing dementia than were individuals who had been
of normal weight at that age. But those who had been obese in middle age had
dementia risk that was twice as high as controls.
And when the scientists took other possibly confounding
factorsmidlife high blood pressure; midlife cholesterol level; midlife
smoking; a history of diabetes, heart attack, or stroke, and apolipoprotein E
gene statusinto consideration as well, they still found that
individuals who had been obese in midlife were about twice as likely to have
dementia later in life.
Finally, the researchers found that high blood pressure and high
cholesterol levels at midlife were also significant risk factors, each of them
increasing the risk about two times. In persons having all three risk
factorsobesity, high blood pressure, and high cholesterolat
midlife, the risk of dementia was six times higher than in persons having none
of the three factors.
Therefore, the results "show that obesity at midlife may increase the
risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease later in life," the researchers
said. Also, they pointed out, "Body mass index is an easily available
and inexpensive measurement for assessing the nutritional status of an
individual, and high BMI can serve as a useful indicator of the increased risk
of dementia."
The study was financed by the Aging Program of the Academy of Finland,
Kuopio University Hospital, Academy of Finland grants, the Gamla Tjanarinnor
Foundation, and the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research.
An abstract of "Obesity and Vascular Risk Factors at Midlife
and the Risk of Dementia and Alzheimer Disease" is posted at
<http://archneur.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/62/10/1556>.
Arch Neurol 2005 62 1556[Abstract/Free Full Text]
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