Type 2 diabetes increases
dementia risk
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[December 30, 2015]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) – People with type 2
diabetes are at higher risk for dementia in general. And for one form,
called vascular dementia, diabetes brings more risk to women than men,
according to a new review.
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The most common cause of dementia is Alzheimer’s disease, which is
non-vascular, said senior author Rachel R. Huxley of Curtin
University in Perth, Australia.
Nonvascular means it's not related to problems with blood vessels.
“In Alzheimer’s disease, nerve cells throughout the brain die off,
and abnormal proteins accumulate in the brain for reasons not
entirely known,” Huxley said. “Vascular dementia, in contrast, is
the result of impaired blood flow to the brain, usually by a series
of small, imperceptible strokes.”
Diabetes in women seems to confer more risk for other conditions as
well, Huxley said.
“These findings add to the evidence that diabetes confers a greater
vascular hazard in women compared with men,” Huxley told Reuters
Health by email. “Diabetes confers a greater risk of developing
heart disease, stroke and now vascular dementia in women compared
with men.”
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The authors reviewed 14 studies involving a total of more than 2
million individuals, including more than 100,000 dementia patients.
They reported their findings in Diabetes Care.
Overall, people with diabetes were 60 percent more likely to develop
any dementia than people without diabetes.
Women with diabetes were more than twice as likely as those without
it to develop vascular dementia, compared to a smaller increase in
risk for men with diabetes.
There need to be more research into how sugar in the blood interacts
with the blood vessels and whether that process is different in
women in men, Huxley said.
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Women tend to be undertreated for vascular risks relative to men,
she noted.
“We can't definitively say whether the relationship is causal or not
because the studies were all observational (rather than randomized
trials) and therefore there always remains the possibility that the
relationship is confounded,” Huxley said.
A third factor, like obesity, could have been part of the
relationship between diabetes and dementia, she said.
Keeping fit, maintaining a healthy diet, quitting smoking and giving
your brain as well as your body regular work-outs can help decrease
the risk of dementia for people with diabetes, Huxley said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1QXPndu Diabetes Care, online December 17,
2015.
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