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Adopting a combination of key lifestyle habits — including exercise, a healthy diet and intellectual and social stimulation — improved thinking and memory skills in adults in their 60s and 70s who were at increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia, according to results from a large study presented July 28 at the Alzheimer’s Association International Conference in Toronto.
“We know now that healthy behaviors matter for brain health,” said Laura D. Baker, one of the leaders of the clinical trial, known as POINTER, or the U.S. Study to Protect Brain Health Through Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Risk.
A closer look at the study
For the study, clinical trial leaders randomly assigned 2,111 volunteer participants, the average age of whom was 68, to either an intensive, highly structured lifestyle change program or a self-guided program with less support. Both groups saw improvements in their cognitive health, but participants assigned to the structured program improved slightly more.
Although cognitive abilities tend to gradually decline with age, volunteers who followed the most intensive regimens appear to have slowed the cognitive aging clock, said Baker, professor of gerontology and geriatrics and internal medicine at Wake Forest University School of Medicine.
“Compared to the self-guided group, participants in the structured group performed at a level comparable to adults one to two years younger,” Baker said.
Because POINTER did not include an untreated control group, Baker said, researchers couldn’t determine how much participants in either group benefited compared with the general public.
Leaders of the study encouraged all participants, who ranged in age from 60 to 79, to adopt habits that have been shown to benefit brain health, including increasing physical exercise, adopting a healthy diet, maintaining social ties, engaging in online “brain training” sessions and getting regular checkups to monitor their cardiovascular health.
The findings, published in the medical journal JAMA, reinforce earlier research from Finland showing that lifestyle changes can help adults stay mentally sharp, even when they have multiple risk factors for dementia.
Participants in the POINTER study began the trial in good cognitive health. However, most had poor diets, obesity, high blood pressure, prediabetes, sedentary lifestyles and other risk factors for dementia.
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About 30 percent of the study volunteers have a genetic variant, APOE-e4, which raises the risk of dementia. These participants also improved their cognitive scores with lifestyle changes.
In terms of cognitive scores, POINTER participants “improved by almost an equal amount to the amount that we expected them to decline,” says Josef Coresh, M.D., founding director of the Optimal Aging Institute at NYU Langone Health, who was not involved in the study.
What we know about reducing dementia risk
Last year, a Lancet Commission concluded that about 45 percent of all cases of dementia are potentially preventable if people and policymakers address 14 modifiable risk factors throughout life. Those risk factors include:
- Hypertension (high blood pressure)
- High LDL (bad) cholesterol
- Diabetes
- Vision loss
- Hearing loss
- Smoking
- Obesity
- Depression
- Physical inactivity
- Excessive alcohol consumption
- Traumatic brain injury
- Air pollution
- Lack of education
- Social isolation
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