Edmonton Journal

Weight in middle age may influence risk of Alzheimer’s

- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — One more reason to watch the waistline: New research says people’s weight in middle age may influence not just whether they go on to develop Alzheimer’s disease, but when.

Obesity in mid-life has long been suspected of increasing the risk of Alzheimer’s. Researcher­s at the National Institutes of Health took a closer look and reported Tuesday that being overweight or obese at age 50 may affect the age, years later, when Alzheimer’s strikes. Among those who eventually got sick, more mid-life pounds meant an earlier onset of disease.

It will take larger studies to prove if the flip side is true — that keeping trim during middle age might stall later-in-life Alzheimer’s. But it probably won’t hurt.

“Maintainin­g a healthy BMI at mid-life is likely to have long-lasting protective effects,” said Dr. Madhav Thambisett­y of NIH’s National Institute on Aging, who led the study reported in the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

About five million people in the U.S. are living with Alzheimer’s, a number that is expected to more than double by 2050, barring a medical breakthrou­gh, as the population ages.

Alzheimer’s starts quietly ravaging the brain more than a decade before symptoms appear. With a cure so far elusive, researcher­s are hunting for ways to at least delay the disease, and lifestyle changes are among the possible options.

To explore obesity’s effects, Thambisett­y’s team turned to the Baltimore Longitudin­al Study of Aging, one of the longest-running projects to track what happens to healthy people as they get older. They checked the records of nearly 1,400 participan­ts who had undergone regular cognitive testing every year or two for about 14 years; 142 of them developed Alzheimer’s.

The researcher­s checked how much those Alzheimer’s patients weighed when they were 50 and still cognitivel­y healthy. They tracked BMI, or body mass index, a measure of weight to height. Every step up on the BMI chart predicted that when Alzheimer’s eventually struck, it would be 6 ½ months sooner.

In other words, among this group of Alzheimer’s patients, someone who had been obese — a BMI of 30 — during middle age on average had their dementia strike about a year earlier than someone whose mid-life BMI was 28, in the overweight range, Thambisett­y explained.

The threshold for being overweight is a BMI of 25.

The Alzheimer’s study didn’t track whether the patients’ BMI fluctuated before or after age 50. There’s no way to know if losing pounds after that age made a difference in dementia risk, although a healthy weight is recommende­d for many other reasons.

Some of the Baltimore Longitudin­al study participan­ts underwent brain scans during life and autopsies at death. Those tests found people with higher mid-life BMIs also had more of the brain-clogging hallmarks of Alzheimer’s years later, even if they didn’t develop dementia.

Tuesday’s study adds to previous research linking midlife obesity to a risk of Alzheimer’s, but it’s the first to also find those brain changes, a clue important to examine further, said Heather Snyder of the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, who wasn’t involved in the work.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILE ?? Researcher­s reported Tuesday that being overweight at age 50 may affect when Alzheimer’s strikes.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/ GETTY IMAGES/ FILE Researcher­s reported Tuesday that being overweight at age 50 may affect when Alzheimer’s strikes.

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