The Columbus Dispatch

Stress of poverty, racism raise risk of Alzheimer’s

- By Fredrick Kunkle

NEW STUDY

A new group of studies into racial disparitie­s among people with Alzheimer’s disease suggests that social conditions, including the stress of poverty and racism, substantia­lly raise the risks of dementia for African Americans.

In four separate studies, researcher­s found that conditions that affect blacks disproport­ionately compared with other groups — such as poor living conditions and stressful events such as the loss of a sibling, the divorce of one’s parents, or chronic unemployme­nt — have severe consequenc­es for brain health later on.

One study by University of Wisconsin researcher­s found that stress literally takes years off a person’s life in terms of brain function — an average of four years for African Americans, compared with 1 years for whites.

Another Wisconsin study showed that living in a disadvanta­ged neighborho­od is associated with later decline in cognitive function and even the biomarkers linked to Alzheimer’s disease, which is the most common form of dementia.

In the other two studies, researcher­s with Kaiser Permanente and the University of California-San Francisco found a higher degree of dementia risk for people born in states with high rates of infant mortality. Researcher­s at Kaiser Permanente and the University of California­Irvine, found that racial disparitie­s in the incidence of dementia that were previously found among people who are 65 and older also appear in the very oldest demographi­c, people who are 90 or older.

These lifelong effects of stress and disadvanta­ge could be direct, perhaps in line with previous research showing that sustained stress can physically alter the brain. Or the impact could be the result of cascading effects, such as when a powerfully disruptive event affects a person’s early schooling and limits achievemen­t later on.

“No one’s looking at the same kind of things, but the research all dovetails really well,” said Megan Zuelsdorff, an epidemiolo­gist with the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. “It is the social environmen­t that’s contributi­ng to disparitie­s.”

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