Chattanooga Times Free Press

Study: Exercise helps ward off dementia

-

DEAR DOCTOR: I’m told that being physically fit in middle age can decrease the risk of dementia. Just how much exercise is enough?

DEAR READER: A study conducted in Sweden has yielded some rather dramatic findings. According to the researcher­s, middle-age women who had a very high degree of physical fitness were almost 90 percent less likely to develop dementia when they reached old age compared to women with medium or poor physical fitness. When women from the “very fit” group did develop dementia, it was at about age 90 rather than 79, a full 11 years later than the average age at which cognitive decline appeared in members of the less-fit groups.

The study, published online in the medical journal Neurology in March, began in 1968. That’s when researcher­s tested the level of physical fitness of a group of 191 women ages 38-60. The women’s peak cardiovasc­ular capacity was gauged via a test on a stationary bicycle, which they were asked to ride in several stages until they reached a point of exhaustion. They were then sorted into subgroups based on their levels of cardiovasc­ular fitness. Over the course of the next 44 years, the

women who remained in the study underwent periodic cognitive screening.

During that time, 44 study participan­ts went on to develop dementia. Of those, just 5 percent came from the group deemed “very fit.” In the group of women who tested as moderately fit, 25 percent developed dementia. Among the women with the lowest degree of physical fitness, almost one-third of them went on to develop dementia.

We understand the challenge of finding time for exercise. But a mounting body of research suggests that every minute you put into physical fitness now will pay off for years to come. For general health, current guidelines suggest at least 30 minutes of physical activity per day. When it comes to improved fitness and cardiovasc­ular health, the goal becomes up to 60 or 90 minutes per day. This can be broken up into 10- or 15-minute segments.

Eve Glazier, M.D., MBA, is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at UCLA Health.

Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@mednet.ucla.edu, or write: Ask the Doctors, c/o Media Relations, UCLA Health, 924 Westwood Blvd., Suite 350, Los Angeles, CA 90095.

 ??  ?? Dr. Eve Glazier
Dr. Eve Glazier

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States