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Obesity in Middle Age
Associated With Increased Risk of Future Dementia
posted May 5, 2005
Risk of dementia was increased by
74% in obese people, and by 35% in overweight people.
Obesity in middle age is associated with an increased risk of dementia in old
age independent of sociodemographic characteristics and common comorbidities,
according to the results of a 27-year study.
“Contrary to findings from cross sectional studies, a recent prospective study
found that obesity in elderly women increases the risk of dementia," write
Rachel A. Whitmer, and colleagues from Kaiser Permanente, University of
California in San Francisco. "Assessment of obesity before old age may be a more
accurate representation of adiposity as the ratio of lean to fat mass changes
with ageing, resulting in a decreased body mass index."
In a multiethnic cohort of 10,276 men and women at the Kaiser Permanente
Northern California Medical Group, the investigators determined the predictive
value of mid-life adiposity, reflected in body mass index and tricep and
subscapular skinfold thickness, on the risk of developing dementia. Participants
had detailed health evaluations from 1964 to 1973 when they were aged 40 to 45
years, and they were still members of the health plan in 1994. Average duration
of follow-up was 27 years.
The primary outcome was diagnosis of dementia from January 1994 to April 2003.
Cox proportional hazard models evaluated time to diagnosis adjusted for age,
sex, race, education, smoking, alcohol use, marital status, diabetes,
hypertension, hyperlipidemia, stroke, and ischemic heart disease. Obesity was
defined as body mass index of at least 30 kg/m2, overweight as body mass index
25.0 to 29.9 kg/m2, and normal weight as body mass index 18.6 to 24.9 kg/m2.
From January 1994 to April 2003, 713 (6.9%) participants were diagnosed with
dementia. Compared with dementia risk in people of normal weight, risk of
dementia was increased by 74% in obese people (hazard ratio [HR], 1.74; 95%
confidence interval [CI], 1.34 to 2.26), and by 35% in overweight people (HR,
1.35; 95% CI, 1.14 to 1.60).
Body mass index predicted dementia more strongly in women: obese women were 200%
more likely to have dementia than women of normal weight, whereas obese men had
a nonsignificant 30% increase in risk.
Study limitations include ability to assess dementia only in participants who
were still members of the health plan when dementia was diagnosed; lack of data
on exercise, nutrition, or mid-life measures of cognitive functioning; lack of
measurement of central obesity; and possible underdiagnosis of dementia in those
who did not participate in visits.
"Adiposity in mid-life is associated with an increased risk of dementia in old
age independent of sociodemographic characteristics and common comorbidities,"
the authors write. "Future studies on obesity and dementia should consider
distribution of adiposity and the role of adipocytokines on brain structure and
function. If these results can be confirmed elsewhere, perhaps treatment of
obesity might reduce the risk of dementia."
Source: Diabetes In Control.com: BMJ. Published online April 28,
2005.
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