A study using UK Biobank
data has found that high cardiovascular risk factors, including obesity, are
linked to accelerated brain volume loss, affecting the regions in the temporal
lobe that are crucial for memory and sensory processing.
The long term observational study found
that men were susceptible to the decline a decade earlier (from their mid-50s)
compared to similarly-affected women (from their mid-60s).
Professor Paul Edison at Imperial
College London’s Department of Brain Sciences, who led the study, said: “It was
important to learn that cardiovascular disease on dementia had such a profound
influence in males a decade earlier than in females, and this was not
previously known. This has significant implications for how we treat
cardiovascular disease in men and women to prevent dementia in future.”
While cardiovascular disease risk
factors – such as type 2 diabetes, obesity and high blood pressure -were known
to be linked with a greater risk of developing dementia, researchers in this
study wanted to understand what the best time to intervene with treatment to
stave off the associated decline would be – and whether this differed between
the sexes.
By examining over 34,000 participants of
the UK Biobank, all of whom had abdominal and brain scans, the researchers were
able to identify the effect of cardiovascular risk, abdominal fat, and the fat
that surrounds body organs (visceral adipose tissue) on brain changes.
Analysis of the data showed that higher
levels of abdominal fat and visceral adipose tissue were associated with lower
brain grey matter volume in both men and women.
This negative impact begins a decade
earlier in men (mid-50s) compared to women (mid-60s), persisting for two
decades and irrespective of the APOE ε4 gene – which is
linked to a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease.
Now, the researchers suggest that
aggressively managing cardiovascular risk factors, especially before age 55,
could be crucial in preventing neurodegeneration.
Professor Edison explained; “Targeting
cardiovascular risk and obesity a decade earlier in males than females may be
vital in preventing diseases like Alzheimer’s. It’s possible that repurposing
existing drugs for obesity and cardiovascular disease are a potential way of
treating this and other degenerative brain conditions.”
Cardiovascular risk and obesity impact loss of grey matter
volume earlier in males than females is published online in the Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery
& Psychiatry
Story via https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/258793/men-high-risk-heart-disease-face/
Source: Men at high risk of heart disease face earlier brain health decline than women – Scents of Science
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