Getting diabetes before 65 more than doubles risk for Alzheimer's disease and other dementia
Diabetics have a significantly greater risk of dementia,
both Alzheimer's disease and other dementia, reveals important new data from an
ongoing study of twins. The risk of dementia is especially strong if the onset
of diabetes occurs in middle age, according to the study.
"Our results . . . highlighted the need to maintain
a healthy lifestyle during adulthood in order to reduce the risk of dementia late
in life," explained Dr. Margaret Gatz, who directs the Study of Dementia
in Swedish Twins.
In a study published in the January 2009 issue of Diabetes,
Gatz and researchers from Sweden show that getting diabetes before the age of
65 corresponds to a 125 percent increased risk for Alzheimer's disease.
This risk of Alzheimer's disease or other dementia was
significant for mid-life diabetics - as opposed to those who develop diabetes
after 65 - even when controlling for family factors. In other studies, genetic
factors and childhood poverty have been shown to independently contribute to the
risk of both diabetes and dementia.
"Twins provide naturally matched pairs, in which
confounding factors such as genetics and childhood environment may be removed
when comparisons are made between twins," explained Gatz, professor of psychology,
gerontology and preventive medicine at the University of Southern California and
foreign adjunct professor of medical epidemiology and biostatistics at the Karolinska
Institute in Sweden.
Indeed, the chances of a diabetic developing Alzheimer's
disease may be even greater in real life than in the study, the researchers write.
They identify several factors that might have led them to underestimate the risk
of dementia and Alzheimer's among those who develop diabetes before the age of
65.
Diabetes usually appears at a younger age than dementia
does, the researchers note. Diabetes is also associated with a higher mortality
rate, which may reduce the size of the sample of older adults. In addition, approximately
30 percent of older adults with diabetes have not been diagnosed.
The results of the study implicate adult choices such
as exercise, diet and smoking, as well as glycemic control in patients with diabetes,
in affecting risk for Alzheimer's disease and diabetes, according to the researchers.
The sample for the study was 13,693 Swedish twins aged
65 or older in 1998, the year tracking for dementia began. Information about diabetes
came from prior surveys of twins and linkage to hospital discharge registry data
beginning in the 1960s.
Weili Xu of the Karolinska Institute was the lead author
of the study, which was a part of her dissertation research.
The research was supported by grants from the National
Institute on Aging, the Alzheimer's Association (U.S.A.), the Swedish Research
Council in Medicine, and Swedish Brain Power.
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