The Press

Major life events can raise risk of dementia

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UNITED STATES: Getting divorced, losing a parent or being fired can age the brain by four years, a study suggests.

One stressful event - even including falling out with the inlaws - could increase the risk of dementia, according to data suggesting that life’s serious misfortune­s could have knock-on effects decades later. Efforts to cushion the blow of bereavemen­t, abuse or other traumatic events could help to protect the brain, experts speculated.

Researcher­s at the University of Wisconsin looked at 1320 adults with an average age of 58 to study how stressful life events, ranging from serious illness to imprisonme­nt, affected the brain. Those who had more such problems scored worse on cognitive tests, scientists told the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n Internatio­nal Conference in London yesterday.

Megan Zuelsdorrf­f, who led the research, said the effect was particular­ly pronounced in the black people she studied, who tended to have suffered more, calculatin­g that, for them, ‘‘adverse events across the lifespan predict cognitive function more strongly than establishe­d risk factors including age, education and the APOE-e4 Alzheimer’s risk gene’’.

Maria Carrillo, chief scientific

"Brain health should be thought of as a life course issue, not just in later or mid-life." Maria Carrillo, chief scientific officer at the Alzheimer's Associatio­n

officer at the Alzheimer’s Associatio­n, a Chicago-based not-forprofit organisati­on, said that ‘‘each stressful situation amounts to about four years of cognitive ageing’’, pointing out these could happen at any time in life. ‘‘Things like death of a parent, abuse, loss of a job, loss of a home, so it’s a variety of different things that you imagine would be stressful. A change of school for some children could even be quite stressful. Brain health should be thought of as a life course issue, not just in later or mid-life. We have to start thinking about brain health at birth, if not before.’’

Exactly how stress damages the brain is not clear, but the tissue inflammati­on it is known to cause is thought to be the most likely explanatio­n. Chronic inflammati­on can cause damage over time, while also perhaps making the brain more vulnerable to later illness. Depression could also contribute, as it is known to be linked to dementia.

Carol Routledge, director of research at the charity Alzheimer’s Research UK, said: ‘‘Our brains are incredibly intricate organs that show enormous resilience to keep us ticking every day. Stressful life events can turn our lives upside down for a time and though most people can eventually return to an even keel, we can’t be sure how psychologi­cal stress could impact the workings of the brain over time . . . There is a growing realisatio­n that events and experience­s throughout life can impact the brain decades later and researcher­s must take a whole life-span approach to understand­ing brain health in later life.’’

Doug Brown, of the Alzheimer’s Society research charity, said: ‘‘We know that prolonged stress can have an impact on our health, so it’s no surprise that this study indicates stressful life events may also affect our memory and thinking abilities later in life. However, it remains to be establishe­d whether these stressful life events can lead to an increased risk of dementia.’’ - The Times

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