Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Healthy living tied to better cognition

- THE WASHINGTON POST

Healthy lifestyles are associated with better cognitive function in older adults — even those whose brains show signs of dementia, according to research published in JAMA Neurology last month. The study suggests that a healthy lifestyle could buffer older adults against cognitive decline and boost their “cognitive reserve.”

Researcher­s used data from the Rush Memory and Aging Project, a long-term study that looked at patients’ lifestyles and health and analyzed autopsy data from 1997 to 2022.

Scientists examined demographi­c, lifestyle and postmortem informatio­n on 586 patients, including details about their diets, their cognitive functionin­g before death and lifestyle factors such as alcohol intake and physical activity.

The patients, 70.8% of whom were female, lived to a mean age of 90.9. Their brain autopsies were examined for physical signs associated with dementia, such as a buildup of amyloid plaques, which disrupt cell function in the brain and are associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

Among all the patients, higher healthy lifestyle scores in five domains — diet, late-life cognitive activity, physical activity, smoking cessation and low alcohol intake — were associated with better cognitive function before their deaths. The associatio­n held even when the autopsies showed signs of brain changes consistent with dementia.

Overall, just a one-point increase in lifestyle score was associated with better cognition.

The analysis suggests that a healthy lifestyle could boost people’s “cognitive reserve,” the researcher­s write, allowing patients to stay sharp despite changes in their brains.

Lifestyle factors like diet and nutrition might protect the brain from inflammati­on and oxidative stress, the researcher­s write. Most of the patients in the study sample were White, and the researcher­s note that the lifestyle informatio­n was self-reported.

The analysis “is a crucial step forward” in addressing questions about the connection­s between lifestyle, brain changes and cognition, write a pair of researcher­s in a related editorial in JAMA Neurology. They suggest that lifestyle factors be prescribed alongside Alzheimer’s disease medication­s and call for more studies that look at dementia risk reduction among diverse groups.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States