Healthy Lifestyle and Cognition in Older Adults With Common Neuropathologies of Dementia
JAMA Neurol. 2024 Mar 1;81(3):233-239.
Importance: A healthy lifestyle is associated with better cognitive functioning in older adults, but whether this association is independent of the accumulation of dementia-related pathologies in the brain is uncertain.
Objective: To determine the role of postmortem brain pathology, including β-amyloid load, phosphorylated tau tangles, cerebrovascular pathology, and other brain pathologies, in the association between lifestyle and cognition proximate to death.
Design, setting, and participants: This cohort study used data from the Rush Memory and Aging Project, a longitudinal clinical-pathologic study with autopsy data from 1997 to 2022 and up to 24 years of follow-up. Participants included 754 deceased individuals with data on lifestyle factors, cognitive testing proximate to death, and a complete neuropathologic evaluation at the time of these analyses. Data were analyzed from January 2023 to June 2023.
Exposures: A healthy lifestyle score was developed based on self-reported factors, including noncurrent smoking, at least 150 minutes of physical activity per week, limiting alcohol consumption, a Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND) diet score higher than 7.5, and a late-life cognitive activity score higher than 3.2. The lifestyle score ranges from 0 to 5, with higher scores reflecting a healthier lifestyle.
Main outcomes and measures: The global cognitive score was derived from a battery of nineteen standardized tests. Brain pathology measures included β-amyloid load, phosphorylated tau tangles, global Alzheimer disease pathology, vascular brain pathologies, Lewy body, hippocampal sclerosis, and TAR DNA-binding protein 43.
Results: Of 586 included decedents, 415 (70.8%) were female, 171 (29.2%) were male, and the mean (SD) age at death was 90.9 (6.0) years. Higher lifestyle score was associated with better global cognitive functioning proximate to death. In the multivariable-adjusted model, a 1-point increase in lifestyle score was associated with 0.216 (SE = 0.036, P < .001) units higher in global cognitive scores. Neither the strength nor the significance of the association changed substantially when common dementia-related brain pathologies were included in the multivariable-adjusted models. The β estimate after controlling for the β-amyloid load was 0.191 (SE = 0.035; P < .001). A higher lifestyle score was associated with lower β-amyloid load in the brain (β = -0.120; SE = 0.041; P = .003), and 11.6% of the lifestyle-cognition association was estimated through β-amyloid load.
Conclusions and relevance: This study found that in older adults, a healthy lifestyle may provide a cognitive reserve to maintain cognitive abilities independently of common neuropathologies of dementia.
Lifestyle and dementia risk
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 1 Replies
- 1664 Views
-
Last post by jimmylegs
-
- 0 Replies
- 2090 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 0 Replies
- 1639 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 0 Replies
- 1918 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 1 Replies
- 2328 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 0 Replies
- 3721 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 0 Replies
- 1582 Views
-
Last post by NHE
-
- 1 Replies
- 1914 Views
-
Last post by ElliotB
-
- 0 Replies
- 2853 Views
-
Last post by NHE