By Kathleen Doheny, HealthDay
Being merely overweight in middle age raised risk by 70 percent compared to normal-weight peers, experts find.
TUESDAY, May 3 2011 (HealthDay News) — Being overweight during middle age may increase your risk of developing dementia later on, a new Swedish study suggests.
Several studies have already linked obesity
in middle age to dementia in later life, but it was unclear whether
merely carrying some extra pounds in midlife was a risk factor. The new
research suggests that even being overweight — defined as having a body
mass index (BMI) of 25 to 30 — is linked with a higher risk of dementia.
"Being overweight at midlife increased the risk of dementia in late
life by more than 70 percent," said lead study author Dr. Weili Xu, a
postdoctoral researcher at Karolinska Institute in Stockholm.
Being obese raised the risk even more, to nearly fourfold.
"Although the effect of midlife overweight on dementia is not as
substantial as that of obesity, its impact on public health is
significant," Xu said, noting that 1.6 billion adults worldwide are
obese or overweight, including 50 percent of adults in the United States
and Europe.
The study is published in the May 3 issue of Neurology.
In her study, Xu analyzed information from the Swedish Twin
Registry. It included data on 8,534 twins aged 65 and older. Of those,
350 were diagnosed with dementia and 114 with possible dementia.
Thirty years earlier, the participants had provided what then must have seemed like mundane data: their height and weight.
That data would prove invaluable as Xu grouped them according to
their BMIs, from underweight to obese (having a BMI higher than 30).
Nearly 30 percent, she found, were either overweight or obese during
midlife.
Further analysis showed that being overweight or obese in midlife independently increased the risk of later dementia, including Alzheimer's and vascular dementia.
About 26 percent of participants without dementia had been
overweight at midlife, compared to 36 percent of those with possible
dementia and 39 percent with diagnosed dementia.
And although 2.7 percent of seniors without dementia had been obese
at midlife, 6.9 percent of those with dementia had been obese, as well
as 5.3 percent of those with possible dementia.
When Xu analyzed twin pairs in which one had dementia in later life
and one did not, she found the link to weight no longer significant,
suggesting early environment and genetics also play roles in dementia.
Why the weight-dementia link? Several mechanisms could explain it,
Xu said. A higher BMI is linked with diabetes and vascular disease,
which is in turn related to the risk of dementia. Higher weight at
midlife may reflect a long period of exposure to higher inflammation
throughout the body, which has been linked with lower cognitive
function.
Xu and her colleagues noted several study limitations, including
the notion that BMI may not be the perfect measure of body fat
composition.
They also noted that in terms of lowering dementia risk, it's never too late to start reducing body fat.
The study has a number of strengths, including the large number of
people studied, according to Dr. Gary Kennedy, director of geriatric
psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center and professor of psychiatry and
behavioral science at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.
Although the study finds a link between being overweight in midlife
and dementia risk, it does not prove cause-and-effect, he said. Still,
there is evidence that fatty tissue secretes inflammatory cytokines and
other chemicals. These may have a direct effect on the brain, he said,
inflicting damage to the neurons.
Dr. Gisele Wolf-Klein, director of geriatric education at the North
Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System in Hyde Park, N.Y., said the
study "is of great relevance in view of the growing epidemic of obesity
in both the United States and Europe."
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