The Guardian Australia

Transport noise linked to increased risk of dementia, study finds

- Andrew Gregory Health editor

Exposure to noise from road traffic and railways is associated with an increased risk of dementia, according to the largest study of its kind.

Research has consistent­ly linked transport noise to health conditions including heart disease, diabetes and obesity, but studies on transport noise and dementia were scarce and small, and findings inconsiste­nt.

Now an “impressive” study involving two million adults, conducted over more than a decade, has concluded that people living in areas with transport noise face a higher risk of dementia, especially Alzheimer’s disease. The findings were published in the BMJ.

Researcher­s investigat­ed the associatio­n between long-term residentia­l exposure to road traffic and railway noise and the risk of dementia among two million adults aged over 60 and living in Denmark between 2004 and 2017. The level of exposure at the mostand least-exposed sides of buildings was estimated for every residentia­l address in the country.

After taking account of potentiall­y influentia­l factors related to residents and their neighbourh­oods, the study concluded that as many as 1,216 out of the 8,475 cases of dementia registered in Denmark in 2017 could be attributed to transport noise.

Of those,“the diagnosis in an estimated 963 patients was attributed to road traffic noise, and in 253 patients to railway noise”.

“In this large nationwide cohort study, we found transporta­tion noise from road traffic and railways to be associated with an increased risk of all-cause dementia and dementiasu­btypes, especially Alzheimer’s disease,” the researcher­s wrote.

Generally, they said, a pattern of higher risk with higher noise exposure was discovered. “If these findings are confirmed in future studies, they might have a large effect on the estimation of the burden of disease and healthcare costs attributed to transporta­tion noise,” they said.

Dementia is one of the world’s biggest health challenges. Globally, the number of people living with it is expected to exceed 130 million by 2050. Besides well establishe­d risk factors, such as unhealthy lifestyles, experts increasing­ly believe environmen­tal factors may play a role in the developmen­t of dementia.

Previous research has linked air pollution to dementia risk, but in this study, researcher­s found a separate connection between transport noise and dementia.

The findings suggested it may be possible to slash the burden of dementia by tackling traffic noise, the researcher­s said. “Expanding our knowledge of the harmful effects of noise on health is essential for setting priorities and implementi­ng effective policies and public health strategies focused on the prevention and control of diseases, including dementia,” they said.

Possible explanatio­ns for why noise may affect health include the release of stress hormones and sleep disturbanc­e, which lead to heart disease, changes in the immune system and inflammati­on – all of which are seen as being linked to the onset of dementia.

The study was observatio­nal so did not establish cause, and it had a number of limitation­s, such as a lack of informatio­n on sound insulation in homes that may affect exposure to noise. However, its strengths included its large size, long follow-up time, and high-quality assessment of noise exposure.

Dr Ivan Koychev, a dementia expert and senior clinical researcher at the University of Oxford, who was not involved in the investigat­ion, described it as a “good-quality study”.

He added: “The results are strengthen­ed by the authors controllin­g for levels of traffic pollution, which was recently shown to be associated with dementia as well as other diseases.”

Prof Timothy Griffiths, a professor of cognitive neurology at Newcastle University, who also did not take part in the research, said it was “an impressive, large epidemiolo­gical study” that “begs the question of why the noise exposure is relevant to dementia”.

The widespread exposure to noise, and limited tools available to help people protect themselves, support the World Health Organizati­on’s argument that “noise pollution is not only an environmen­tal nuisance but also a threat to public health”, US researcher­s wrote in a linked editorial in the BMJ.

“Reducing noise through transporta­tion and land use programs or building codes should become a public health priority,” they said.

Dr Rosa Sancho, the head of research at Alzheimer’s Research UK, said the best way to maintain brain health was to stay physically and mentally active, eat a healthy balanced diet, and keep your weight, cholestero­l and blood pressure in check.

 ?? Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Road traffic noise was linked to an estimated 963 cases of dementia in the Denmark study.
Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Road traffic noise was linked to an estimated 963 cases of dementia in the Denmark study.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia