Business Standard

Dementia risk doubles right after a stroke

- LISA RAPAPORT 8 September

People who have recently experience­d a stroke may be more than twice as likely to develop dementia than individual­s who haven’t had a stroke, a new study suggests.

While stroke has long been linked to a heightened risk of dementia, particular­ly in older adults, the exact magnitude of the increased risk hasn’t been consistent across previous studies investigat­ing this connection. For the current study, researcher­s pooled data from 48 previous studies with a total of 3.2 million participan­ts worldwide.

People who had a recent stroke were 2.2 times more likely to develop dementia than people who never had a stroke, the analysis found. And a history of stroke was associated with a 69 percent higher chance of developing dementia.

“These findings stress the importance of protecting the blood supply to the brain in order to protect against dementia,” said senior study author Dr. David Llewellyn of the University of Exeter Medical School in the UK.

“By focusing upon lifestyle factors that are within our control we can reduce our risk of developing dementia as a result of stroke,” Llewellyn said by email.

“Quit smoking, eat a Mediterran­ean diet, get physically and mentally active, and drink less alcohol,” Llewellyn advised. “Most people who have a stroke do not develop dementia as a result, so improvemen­ts in lifestyle after stroke are also likely to be beneficial.”

Alzheimer’s disease is the most common cause of dementia among older adults. The progressiv­e brain disorder slowly erodes memory and thinking skills and eventually leaves people unable to handle basic tasks in daily life.

Previous research has linked so-called vascular risk factors, including obesity, diabetes, smoking, high cholestero­l and elevated blood pressure, to higher odds of dementia, cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s disease.

But it’s been unclear whether these factors contribute indirectly by restrictin­g blood flow in the brain, or if they directly cause a buildup of amyloid protein fragments that are linked to Alzheimer’s.

Certain characteri­stics of stroke, such as the location and the extent of brain damage, may also influence the risk of dementia, the study authors conclude. Men may also have a greater risk of dementia after a stroke than women.

One limitation of the analysis is that the smaller studies varied in design, duration, and how they assessed stroke and dementia, researcher­s note in Alzheimer’s & Dementia.

Still, the results add to a large body of evidence linking stroke to dementia, said Dr. Andrew Budson, a researcher at the Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System and Boston University School of Medicine who wasn’t involved in the study.

People who had a recent stroke were 2.2 times more likely to develop dementia

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