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Cardiometabolic diseases and early cognitive decline: Mitigated by integrated active lifestyle for brain health. | LitMetric

Cardiometabolic diseases and early cognitive decline: Mitigated by integrated active lifestyle for brain health.

J Affect Disord

Institute of Geriatrics, Beijing Key Laboratory of Aging and Geriatrics, National clinical Research Center for Geriatrics Diseases, Second Medical Center of Chinese PLA General Hospital, Beijing 100853, China; State Key Laboratory of Kidney Diseases, Beijing 100853, China. Electronic address:

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cardiometabolic diseases (CMDs) are linked to a higher risk of cognitive decline in elderly individuals, though an active lifestyle may help reduce this risk.
  • A study tracking over 2,500 seniors revealed that those with more healthy lifestyle factors had a lower chance of cognitive decline; specifically, an active lifestyle significantly lessened the risk associated with CMDs.
  • However, the study did not include dietary factors, which could also influence cognitive health outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background: Cardiometabolic diseases (CMDs) increases the risk of cognitive decline, but the extent to which this can be offset by adherence to an active integrated lifestyle is unknown.

Methods: This prospective study used the baseline and 2-year follow-up data of 2537 dementia-free elderly ≥60 from PINDEC Project. Lifestyle factors (including physical exercise, social interaction, leisure activities, sleep quality, smoking, and alcohol consumption) were collected and the integrated score was calculated. Participants were divided into three groups based on integrated score tertiles (inactive, ≤3 score; intermediate, 4 score; and active, ≥5). Logistic regression was used in data analysis.

Results: 35.2 % participants had 5-6 healthy components, while only 5.4 % had all 6 healthy lifestyles. The multiadjusted odds ratios (ORs, 95 % confidence interval) of early cognitive decline was 1.223 (0.799-1.871) and 1.832 (1.140-2.943) for participants with only one CMD and any two or more CMDs, respectively. An inverse dose-response relationship was found between lifestyle scores and early cognitive decline (P = 0.017). In participants with active lifestyle, the OR for early cognitive decline comparing the CMDs status of any two or more CMDs vs. CMDs-free was 0.778 (95%CI: 0.302-2.007). Participants with inactive lifestyle and any two or more CMDs had a near 3.4-fold increased risk of early cognitive decline than those without CMDs who had intermediate to active lifestyle (OR = 3.422, 95%CI: 1.764-6.638).

Limitations: Our research lacks information about nutrition.

Conclusions: A dose-response relationship exists between CMDs status and risk of early cognitive decline. However, adherence to an active integrated lifestyle may mitigate this risk.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.01.059DOI Listing

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