USA TODAY US Edition

Housework, yardwork can reduce risk of Alzheimer’s

Intensity matters, but it isn’t just about exercise

- By Janice Lloyd USA TODAY

Something to sweeten that honey-do list: Study suggests gardening, cleaning, cooking — any physical activity — can cut risk of dementia.

Boomers get older. Aging is the main risk factor.

During the study, 71 of the 716 study participan­ts developed Alzheimer’s. Study authors say this is the first study to use an objective measuremen­t of all physical activity in addition to self-reports. Participan­ts wore an actigraph on their wrists to assess levels of activity.

Their mean score was 3.3 hours a week. Exercise intensity also mattered; those in the bottom 10% for intensity of physical activity were almost three times as likely to develop Alzheimer’s.

The study is the latest evidence that physical activity, even in later years, aids in delaying Alz- heimer’s. The study did not attempt to measure which activities were most helpful.

“We’ve known that muscle activity generates neurons in the brain, but this study gives us additional motivation,” says physician Gary Kennedy, director of geriatric psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City, who was not associated with the study. “It shows you don’t have to go to the gym. Older people very often don’t want to do that.”

Results did not vary by age, sex or education. The authors also looked at chronic health and genetic factors. Among the findings:

-Body mass index, depressive symptoms or vascular risk factors did not change the associatio­n between activities and risk.

-Having the gene APOE4, which puts people at higher risk for developing Alzheimer’s, did not affect the results. Alzheimer’s develops for years prior to symptoms occurring, Kennedy notes. The authors tried to control for that possibilit­y by administer­ing baseline cognitive tests.

“This is an important message for society, as the largest growing segment of our population is old people,” Buchman says. “We need to be encouragin­g physical activities even in very old individual­s, even if their health doesn’t allow them to take part in fitness programs.”

In an accompanyi­ng editorial, the authors cite physical activity as a promising, low-cost, accessible and safe means to prevent Alzheimer’s.

Cleaning house and doing yardwork are taking on new importance. A higher level of physical activity — not just exercising — is linked to a reduced risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease even in people over 80, suggests research published Wednesday in the journal Neurology.

Protective activities include washing dishes, cooking, cleaning, gardening — even playing cards.

People who scored in the bottom 10% of physical activity were more than twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s. Study participan­ts did not have dementia at the start of the four-year study, which is part of the ongoing Memory and Aging Project at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

“The implicatio­n of this study is really astounding,” says physician Aron Buchman, the lead author. “Exercise is good, without a doubt, but this study is about more than exercise. Older people who might not be able to exercise can tailor activities that are right for them.”

There is no cure or drug to delay onset of Alzheimer’s, which affects about 5 million in the USA; numbers are expected to triple as Baby

 ?? By Eileen Blass, USA TODAY ?? Keeping active: A study indicates all sorts of physical activity, including gardening, can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s.
By Eileen Blass, USA TODAY Keeping active: A study indicates all sorts of physical activity, including gardening, can reduce the risk of Alzheimer’s.

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